Synopsis
Retired FBI agent Jack Jablonski stumbles upon a downed airplane containing the body of a beautiful young woman who died of a cocaine overdose, and he sets out to find the truth about the case
Reviews
In this generally entertaining whodunit, retired FBI agent Jack Jablonski must figure out how a small plane with a dead passenger landed on a beach. Visiting L.A. with his wife, Jablonski finds the Cessna during a late-night stroll. An autopsy determines that the beautiful Filipino woman on board died of a cocaine overdose; Jablonski, agreeing to a request for help from the woman's husband, gossip columnist Leo Golden, questions her many paramours. Among them, only Harrison Fulton, the owner of the plane and a big-time network executive, fails to supply an air-tight alibi. Surly flight instructor Juan Sanchez refuses to talk, but he had spent the night of the woman's death in jail. TV writer Lafferty ( The Downing of Flight Six-Heavy ) indulges in ornate dialogue and phrasing--Jablonski's references to "L'Affaire Cessna," for example, seem odd from a former G-man. But a strong ending helps redeem this often trite novel, the first in a projected series.
Copyright 1991 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Jackson Jablonski is an old-fashioned, overweight ex-FBI guy who is decidedly out of place in hip Venice, California, where he and his wife have come to sell her dead brother's beach house. Jablonski is, quite simply, bored out of his mind--until he takes a morning walk on the beach and discovers a very beautiful and very dead young woman strapped into the pilot's seat of a downed small plane. Turns out it was a cocaine overdose and not the crash that killed her, and that sets Jablonski off on the hunt (with virtually no objection from the local police). Did the woman O.D. on her own, or was she murdered? Her sleazy gossip-columnist husband is certainly a suspect, but--since the lady slept around--so are two of her lovers: the married TV executive who owns the plane, and the pilot with whom she regularly flew off to Mexico. Jablonski plods through the case, filling in the rest of his time having meals with his wife or helping keep an eye on the elderly ex-movie star who lives across the street--until he ultimately finds himself alone with the unconscious murderer in a plane heading out over the ocean. Pretty routine stuff, overall, with most of the limited interest coming from the knowledgeable aviation talk throughout (pilot-author Lafferty has also written an aviation thriller, The Downing of Flight Six-Heavy--not reviewed). -- Copyright ©1991, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.
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