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Dark Side of Mercy
Posted by Literary Titan

Dark Side of Mercy, by Douglas Herle, is a hardboiled crime noir novel centered on Benjamin Thomas, a damaged private detective pulled into a case he does not want. A powerful Arizona figure, Horatio Lundlum, hires him to find a missing accountant and a dangerous ledger, but the job quickly widens into something uglier, with missing women, murder, corruption, blackmail, old wounds, and moral debts all crowding the same dark room. It is a detective story, yes, but it is also a book about what mercy costs when everyone involved has already paid too much.
Benjamin Thomas narrates with that dry, bruised wit you expect from classic noir, but Herle does not let the style become a costume. The cigarettes, vodka, crooked office, bad sleep, and sharp one-liners are all there, but underneath them is a man who is not nearly as numb as he pretends to be. I liked that tension. He jokes because he is tired. He drinks because he remembers. He pushes people away because caring has teeth. The writing has a smoky, lived-in quality, and while the mood can be heavy, the dialogue often cuts through it with a clean snap.
Herle also makes some bold choices with the story’s structure and moral landscape. The mystery does not stay neat. It spreads. What starts as a search for a ledger becomes a study of power, prejudice, exploitation, guilt, and the small acts of courage people manage when they are already broken. Some scenes are hard to sit with, and a few characters speak in ways that are ugly and period-specific, but that ugliness feels intentional. The book is not trying to polish its world. It wants us to feel the rot in the walls. I found myself less interested in simply solving the case and more interested in watching Benjamin decide what kind of man he can still be.
I would recommend Dark Side of Mercy to readers who enjoy noir, private detective fiction, and crime novels where the mystery matters but the emotional fallout matters just as much. Fans of flawed investigators, morally tangled cases, and stories with a bitter aftertaste will find a lot to appreciate here. If you like your detective fiction shadowed, wounded, and honest about the damage people carry, this one is worth picking up.
Pages: 316 | ASIN : B0GZ2132CF
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Posted in Book Reviews, Four Stars
Tags: A Benjamin Thomas Novel, author, book, book recommendations, book review, book reviews, bookblogger, books, books to read, bookshelf, crime novel, Dark Side of Mercy, detective, Douglas Herle, ebook, fiction, goodreads, hardboiled crime noir, indie author, kindle, kobo, literature, mystery, noir, nook, novel, private detective fiction, read, reader, reading, story, suspense, writer, writing




