Comment

h2co3
Mar 27, 2014
In the twenty-third Amos Walker novel Estleman bisects one of his early short stories and stuffs in a visit to a Lesbian bar, a man called "Yummy", a woman called "Smoke", two agents of the Israeli Intelligence Service, Madame Sing, and the kitchen sink. Some good scenes for Walker admirers, but the book is weakened by the presence of Madame Sing, who seems like something out of Sax Rohmer. Is it time for Amos to retire?