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Joey's Case
Crime novel by K. C. Constantine From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Joey's Case is a crime novel by the American writer K. C. Constantine set in 1980s Rocksburg, a fictional, blue-collar, Rust Belt town in Western Pennsylvania, modeled on the author's hometown of McKees Rocks, Pennsylvania, adjacent to Pittsburgh.
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Plot
Mario Balzic is the protagonist, an atypical detective for the genre, a Serbo-Italian American cop, middle-aged, unpretentious, a family man who asks questions and uses more sense than force.
The novel opens with a former coal miner, Albert Castelucci, asking Balzic to investigate the killing of his son. He feels the state police in charge of the case have botched the investigation, but when Balzic begins, he finds more puzzles than he first expected.
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Publishing details and honors
It is the eighth book in the seventeen-volume Rocksburg series and was nominated for the Edgar Allan Poe Award for Best Novel in 1989.[1]
Reception
Richard Dyer of The Boston Globe opined that the novel is "frustrating only because it tells it like it is", considering it the best entry in the series.[2] Richard Fuller of The Philadelphia Inquirer wrote that Constantine is "every bit the equal of Leonard and McBain in the dialogue department" and considered his characterisation to be slightly superior.[3]
References
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