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Amazon.com Book Description (ISBN 0684864878, Hardcover)Sly, devious, inventive, and more than a little irritating, the Bard of Vandam Street returns in Steppin' on a Rainbow, a new adventure full of sound, fury, and a hula girl or two. Alone in the world -- meaning: anyone who will speak to him is out of town -- Kinky Friedman ponders the imponderables of life and discusses the state of the world with his cat. The cat, of course, says nothing. Kinky's reverie (and constant state of morbid self-absorption) is interrupted by a call from an old friend in Hawaii, Will Hoover, a journalist on a Honolulu newspaper. Hoover has called with a problem: Mike McGovern, one of Kinky's sidekicks and a stalwart Village Irregular, visiting Hawaii to work on a book, has disappeared while strolling on the beach. Knowing McGovern's penchant for taking the occasional side trip, Kinky is not overly concerned. As the days turn into yet more days, however, consternation grows to the point where Stephanie Dupont (called home from a Caribbean lull to bury her sixteen-year-old pesky Maltese dog) urges Kinky to fly to Hawaii to look into McGovern's disappearance and even offers to join him in the search. Additional support comes from P. I. Steve Rambam, who wings in from Israel to join in the hunt, as well as Kinky's pal John McCall, the Shampoo King from Dripping Springs. Texas, that is. Once in Hawaii, Kinky, Stephanie, Rambam, Hoover, and McCall set off on a perilous adventure involving ancient myths, sacrificial cults, totems, taboos, and the occasional lei. Steppin' on a Rainbow is Kinky Friedman doing what only Kinky Friedman can do -- and, as always, it's outrageous, unsettling, and very, very moving, all at once. (retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:57:58 -0400) The first test round has been closed. Visit the Open Shelves Classification group for details. |
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Published: 2001
Locations: Manhattan, New York, United States &, Honolulu, Hawaii, United States.
First Line: The cat was looking at me again with pity in her eyes.
I have always wanted to read something by Kinky Friedman as I always had the feeling that he is the kind of author that you have to ‘get’ to enjoy, but once you do it’s like belonging to a private club of fellow fans. To say that Kinky Friedman has a larger than life persona is something of an understatement. He made his name in the 1970s with his cult satirical country band Kinky Friedman and the Texas Jewboys who are probably best known for the song They Ain't Makin' Jews Like Jesus Anymore. Kinky turned to writing detective novels in the late 1980s and found success with a fictionalised version of himself who makes a living as a private detective in New York City.
Steppin’ on a Rainbow sees Kinky travel to Honolulu to track down a friend who has gone missing whilst allegedly researching a cookbook.
I really wanted to like this book; I wanted to become a fan and be able to converse with fellow devotees, but this just isn’t going to happen on the strength of this one book. I found that the in-jokes were just plain inaccessible to the first time reader which made the story come across as far too self indulgent and I found it frustrating not knowing enough about the members of the ‘Village Irregulars’. I am sure that this is down to the fact that this is the fourteenth book in the series; why did The Rough Guide to Crime Fiction pick this one? Will I try another one? Maybe, but I'm not rushing. (