Ratings4
Average rating3
I like the way Harrison writes, but not this particular story, if you want to call it that. There's really not much plot.
The complete title of this novel is “The Great Leader: A Faux Mystery” and I probably should have realized the FAUX really does mean false in this book's case. I kept wanting the mystery plot to take off, but the story kept unraveling as the retired detective narrator went off on tangents and rants and macho-man ruminations about his life. While I did find myself interested in some of the observations Det. Sunderson made about life, I was stunned by his absolutely crude and raunchy descriptions of his sexual thoughts and adventures. Since one of his major turn-ons was a 16 y.o. girl (reminiscent of Lisbeth Salander in the Dragon Tatoo series), the pedophilic nature of these musings were just a little too much to me.
The resolution of the mystery was pretty anti-climatic and I finished the novel wishing the author had stuck with the mystery.