A Mysterious Review of Blind Moon Alley by John Florio. A Jersey Leo Mystery.
Review summary: This second in series mystery has a good sense of time and place, Prohibition in Philadelphia. The characters are well drawn and engaging, and while the story starts out slow, by the mid-point it has really captured the reader's attention with its plot twists. A solid effort overall. (Click here for text of full review.)
Our rating:
Blind Moon Alley
John Florio
A Jersey Leo Mystery
Seventh Street Books (August 2014)
Publisher synopsis: It's Prohibition. It's Philadelphia. And Jersey Leo doesn't fit in.
Jersey is an albino of mixed race. Known as "Snowball" on the street, he tends bar at a speakeasy the locals call the Ink Well. There, he's considered a hero for having saved the life of a young boy. But when his old grade school buddy, Aaron Garvey, calls from death row and asks for one last favor, all hell breaks loose.
Jersey finds himself running from a band of crooked cops, hiding an escaped convict in the Ink Well, and reuniting with his grammar school crush — the now sultry Myra Banks, who has shed a club foot and become a speakeasy siren. Through it all, Jersey tries to safeguard the Ink Well with no help other than his ragtag group of friends: his ex-boxing-champion father, Ernie Leo; the street-savvy Johalis; a dim-witted dockworker named Homer; and the dubious palm reader Madame Curio. With them, Jersey digs for the truth about his friend Aaron Garvey — and winds up discovering a few things about himself.
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