Synopsis/blurb….
Meet Davie McCall -
not your average henchman. Abused and tormented by his father for fifteen
years, there is a darkness in him searching for a way out. Under the wing of
Glasgow's Godfather, Joe 'the Tailor' Klein, he flourishes. Joe the Tailor may
be a killer, but there are some lines he won't cross, and Davie agrees with his
strict moral code. He doesn't like drugs. He won't condone foul language. He
abhors violence against women. When the Tailor refuses to be part of Glasgow's
new drug trade, the hits start rolling. It's every man for himself as the
entire criminal underworld turns on itself, and Davie is well and truly caught
up in the action. But an attractive young reporter makes him wonder if he can
leave his life of crime behind and Davie must learn the hard way that you
cannot change what you are. Blood City is a novel set in Glasgow's underworld
at a time when it was undergoing a seismic shift. A tale of violence,
corruption and betrayal, loyalties will be tested and friendships torn apart.
Having read and enjoyed the fourth and final Davie McCall
book Open Wounds a month or two ago,
I decided to backtrack and read the first three in the series.
Blood City
introduces us to Davie and his position of employ with criminal boss, Joe the
Tailor in the early 80s. Davie and his best friend Rab McClymont are the young
Turks in Joe the Tailor’s operation. We
learn of Davie’s troubled upbringing which saw him witness his father killing
his mother in a drunken rage. McCall Snr. flees after the deed and hasn’t been
seen since, though he casts a firm shadow over young Davie throughout the book.
Dannie McCall was well known throughout Glasgow’s criminal
fraternity and when people see Davie he is immediately reminded of who his
father was. Davie wears this association like a badge of shame. Although a
criminal at heart, he is nothing like his father. We discover Joe’s history
also and what he endured during WW2 as a young Jew in Poland, before relocating
to Glasgow. There’s a close bond between Davie and Joe, almost a father and son
relationship.
Skelton also introduces us to several of Glasgow’s finest,
led by Jack Bannatyne, with “black” Jimmy Knight and Frank Donovan his leading
detectives. Teamed together they have differing morals and outlooks on how
their policing should be conducted. The black Knight all too happy to overstep
the mark and use violence on witnesses or intimidate prostitutes into providing
some easy gratification. Donovan, happily married is the other side of the coin.
A scheme to import a massive shipment of drugs, by a
Glasgwegian criminal cooperative, fully embracing Thatcher’s spirit of free
enterprise, sets a gangland feud in place when Joe the Tailor declines to
participate.
Death follows as the various players jockey for position and
a share of the profits. Joe’s a marked man. Jimmy Knight has ambitions also and
is happy to play a long game. Davie’s on a few people’s radar and his new
romance may not be his salvation.
Top marks again for Skelton – character, setting, action,
plot and pace – all massive ticks in the box. Everything I like about crime fiction bundled up in a 220 page offering...........criminals with morals, friendships under pressure, outcome uncertain.
Roll on book 2! (Crow Bait - if you’re interested!)
5 from 5
Open Wounds was reviewed here.
Douglas Skelton has his website here.
Borrowed from my local library. Read in August, 2016.
Sounds like a solid, multi-layered novel, Col. And the setting and context are interesting, too. I like the way, too, that Skelton does character depth. Glad you liked this one as well as you did.
ReplyDeleteI've really enjoyed both of the Skelton books I've read so far. It's impressive how much he squeezes in the 220-odd pages. I suppose a background in journalism sharpens your prose.
DeleteSounds like an intense and powerful read, Col. A pedigreed crime story, no doubt.
ReplyDeleteI don't think it will be too long before I start on the next one!
DeleteSounds interesting with all the different types of characters featured.
ReplyDeleteTracy, yes I really liked it and the characters - especially Davie make it compelling reading. There's also the heroes and anti-heroes in the police, which give it layers.
DeleteI can see his books are right up your street - maybe less for me.
ReplyDeleteBooh! What's not to like! Moira the Philistine....
DeleteCol – A lot packed into short novels, that gets my attention. And, if you like the series, then I’ve got to find it. Thanks.
ReplyDeleteI hope you can track them down, Elgin. I've really enjoyed the two I've read so far. Hopefully you do too, if successful!
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