Skip to main content
PBS logo
 
 

Search - The Devils of Bakersfield: A Jack Liffey Mystery

The Devils of Bakersfield: A Jack Liffey Mystery
The Devils of Bakersfield A Jack Liffey Mystery
Author: John Shannon
The seemingly sleepy oil town of Bakersfield has a long and grim history of hostility towards outsiders, be it the ?Okies? during the Depression, African-Americans, or labor organizes. When Jack Liffey and his daughter Maeve end up in Bakersfield as a respite from their life in Los Angeles, they find that the town has cast its paranoid fears o...  more »
ISBN-13: 9781605980362
ISBN-10: 1605980366
Publication Date: 4/7/2009
Pages: 320
Rating:
  ?

0 stars, based on 0 rating
Publisher: Pegasus
Book Type: Paperback
Members Wishing: 1
Reviews: Member | Amazon | Write a Review
Read All 1 Book Reviews of "The Devils of Bakersfield A Jack Liffey Mystery"

Please Log in to Rate these Book Reviews

reviewed The Devils of Bakersfield: A Jack Liffey Mystery on + 4 more book reviews
By Megan Schultz (San Francisco, CA)
First off, this is my first Jack Liffey mystery and one of only a handful of books that I have read of its genre. I picked up the book because I saw that it was set in Bakersfield, the city where I grew up, and because the author was going to be speaking at a bookstore near where I live now.

The book is a quick, fun read. While it has some slow parts, it is generally fast-moving and entertaining, never tedious. The author throws in some literary references here and there which are fun to spot and think about, but in general the book reads more like genre fiction. Sometimes the author delves into deeper issues and hits the reader over the head with them. He and, by extension, his protagonist Liffey, could be a bit more subtle. In a few places Liffey seems to make statements that are somewhat obvious--restating what has already happened. This doesn't further the story and sometimes makes it seem as if Shannon is using Liffey to lecture the reader.

Shannon's treatment of Bakersfield is a bit rough-handed, though in many ways its not that far off the mark. I really liked the historical artifacts that he put throughout the book. His use of historical context and fog were very creative and were a highlight of the book. It was fun seeing staples of Bakersfield like the Marketplace, the bluffs, and Oildale in print.

I'm struggling right now to give this book four stars. I think it's more of a 3.5 star book. It's 4 to 5 stars a lot of the way through, but the ending is just plain bad.

Overall, a very readable book that I would recommend to people who read crime noir and anybody who wants to read a book with a lot of the Central Valley in it.


Genres: