"Great police procedural"
Andre Trelawney opens up Danse de Minuit, a classy French
club that the locals call a strip joint, in Falcon's Bend,
Wisconsin. He keeps his dancers under tight rein with the
performers residing under his roof and not allowed to
leave the premises without an escort guard. One of the dancers Teresa is found strangled to death
under a bridge in Witmer Park. Police Lieutenant Pete
Shasta and his partner Detective Danny Vincent investigate
the first murder in town in over a year and that incident
was a DUI. They interview Andre who the cops conclude is
hiding something although he seems to have an airtight
alibi. They talk with the wife of the club owner and
follow that up with questioning the surviving dancers
(Lacey, Cherry, Deidre, Sugar and Vanessa). The case
seems to go nowhere as the detectives dig into the
background of the club employees and employer seeking a
motive. DEGREES OF SEPARATION is a terrific police procedural with
detectives struggling to uncover who and why. Pete is a
fabulous focus to the fine plot as he worries that his
second wife will dump him like his first spouse did
because he works long diligent hours on the case instead
of on her. His partner adds depth with his big city
cynical outlook though under thirty (five years in the Big
Apple will do that). The dancers have unique
personalities and Andre is a way out antagonist who has no
apparent reason to kill the victim. Though the twist is
obvious and overused, sub-genre fans will appreciate this
tense one sitting Falcon's Bend offering. Harriet Klausner
Reviewed by Harriet Klausner
Posted November 29, 2004
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