Uncle Denny is Don Meyer's completion of the Sheriff Tom Monason Trilogy, a
series of crime thrillers set in an unnamed ski town high in the mountains of
California. The sheriff is an experienced cop from the big city, now nearing
semi-retirement age and running a tiny, informal police department in what
should be a sleepy town, but rarely is, sort of like Paradise, MA or Cabot Cove,
ME.
As you may have already guessed, most of the charm of Don's trilogy comes
from his quiet town of amiable characters. The main distinction from those
similar settings of novels and television is that blizzards and heavy snow
often play key parts in the crimes solved by Sheriff Monason, and the plot of
Uncle Denny is no exception.
Key storyline elements from Winter Ghost and McKenzie Affair have been woven
into this third book, but the story pretty much stands alone for any reader
who has not read the earlier books. You can read my reviews of these earlier
two by clicking the links, and I highly encourage you to do so, since I am not
repeating much of that material here.
I personally enjoyed McKenzie Affair the most of the three, and Uncle Denny the
least. This is the direct result of so much of this newest storyline
surrounding two groups of feuding mobsters in Chicago. Mr. Meyer explains this
concept in closing remarks at the end of the book. The author describes how he
spent most of his life in Chicago and that he wanted at least one part of the
trilogy to evolve from this experience. That is fine if you like mobsters, but
these sorts of characters have little appeal to my tastes. Maybe yours are
different. I have memorized all the Andy Griffith reruns, but I have never
watched The Sopranos. Enough said?
The title derives from a mispronunciation of a lead character's name, that of
a Russian mobster. An FBI agent phones Sheriff Monason to explain that several
criminals from Chicago are headed to Monason's town. Because of a severe
blizzard in the area, FBI personnel cannot reach the scene quickly enough, so
the sheriff and his few deputies need to head off the mobsters at the pass, as
they used to say in old westerns. The reader is introduced to the malicious
modus operandi of Uncle Denny early in the story, and then the plot begins to
unroll.
Don Meyer writes in a very direct, concise manner, telling his story mostly
through incisive dialogue with little extraneous descriptive detail. Uncle
Denny is a somewhat satisfying read, but proper editing and punctuation are
sorely lacking. There are way too many repeated phrases. A few examples are
that cell phones are always pinched closed and Sheriff Monason's desk chair
always squeaks; however, I was most annoyed that Uncle Denny always drives a
big black SUV. It is never a sport utility vehicle, a Cadillac, an Escalade, a
truck, a snow-covered vehicle, or even a black SUV or a big SUV. An editor
should mention these to you. Do you get my snowdrift, Don? I really like your
settings, plotlines, and most of all, your folksy characters, and I think most
readers will, too.
See Also: Winter Ghost at Amazon
McKenzie Affair at Amazon
The Protected Will Never Know
Posted by Floyd M. Orr

Contact the author:
don@dpmeyer.com