cover image SHOOTING DR. JACK

SHOOTING DR. JACK

Norman Green, . . HarperCollins, $25 (304pp) ISBN 978-0-06-018822-1

If nothing concentrates the mind like an imminent hanging, then second place may well be the looming presence of a couple of South American hit men, who in this self-assured debut have their eyes on the Troutman Street junkyard of Fat Tommy Rosselli, a.k.a. Tommy Bagadonuts. Fat Tommy rules his junkyard like a small-scale godfather, finessing the cops and looking out for his partner Stoney and young associate Tuco. He helps Tuco get a new place to live when Tuco's girlfriend throws him out, and he worries about Stoney's drinking (with good reason—Stoney has been blacking out, and it's ruining his marriage). But when Fat Tommy is shot and critically injured by someone he knows, and South American hit men show up, the refrain of his cohorts becomes, "What would Tommy do?" From here on in, this novel about small-time crooks on the shady edge of the law turns into a weirdly compelling tale of character growth and redemption, of a sort. Green does an excellent job of setting up Troutman Street, which runs between Brooklyn and Queens, as not just a road but a self-contained world of its own. The sharply drawn characters and the clever nicknames will invite comparisons to Elmore Leonard, but there's little of Leonard's flash and cockiness here, only a gritty realism, an attention to detail, and a resolute avoidance of clichés that speaks of a writer with his own style and his own story to tell about how men smart enough to see the trap they're in can become smart enough to escape it. (Sept.)

Forecast: Green's strong voice bodes well for this debut and future books; blurbs from Perri O'Shaughnessy and Jeffrey Deaver, a 25-city radio campaign and a five-city author tour should get the word out.