"FAT OLLIE'S BOOK is a fantastic police procedural"
Known for his dissing every race and religion, Detective
Fat Ollie Weeks is proud of his first police
procedural, "Report to the Commissioner". However, the
88th Precinct cop finds official business interfering with
the more important matters of authorship as he is assigned
to investigate the assassination of City Councilman Lester
Henderson, the leading candidate for mayor. Ironically at
least in Ollie's feeble brain, the murder occurs while the
victim was preparing for a major political rally inside the
Martin Luther King Memorial Hall. Ollie has a second more important case to solve when
someone steals his manuscript from his car as he wasted
time looking at the Henderson crime scene. Transvestite
prostitute "Emmy" believes he has found an authentic report
by Officer Olivia Wesley Watts. Emmy plans to locate the
diamonds mentioned in the report while Ollie aided by
Officer Patricia Gomez seeks to recover his novel. FAT OLLIE'S BOOK is a fantastic police procedural that
focuses on two investigations and contains hilarious
excerpts from the "bad" book. The story line satirizes the
police procedural sub-genre leaves no one standing and
especially skinned is Ed McBain. The 87th precinct cops
play key roles and the introduction of Officer Gomez
actually takes Ollie a few steps away from his normal range
of bigotry, but not totally. In the fifty-second 87th
precinct novel (think alphabet two times), Mr. McBain shows
his wit with one of the series best novels ever and surely
will be recognized as one of the year's finest sub-genre
entries. Harriet Klausner
Reviewed by Harriet Klausner
Posted January 2, 2003
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