Chris Aldrich reviewed Confess, Fletch by Gregory Mcdonald
Review of 'Confess, Fletch' on 'Goodreads'
4 stars
I had originally meant to read all the Fletch canon in chronological order from the perspective of the stories' timeline. Unfortunately the immediate availability of the books threw a small curve into the process, so I've read this slightly out of order. Doing so has thrown me as I've been under the assumption that Fletch was generally a journalist working for the same Los Angeles paper the entire time.
The Order I've read the series in so far
Fletch Won #1
Fletch and the Widow Bradley #3
Fletch, Too #2
Confess Fletch #6
Carioca Fletch #5
At the opening of this he's going by the name of Peter Fletcher which was quirky, even knowing how much I.M. dislikes his given names, and he seemed to have a far more Italian flair and a rich man's flâneur attitude toward life compared with his previous character. Gone was the ne'er-do-well under employed hero and in his place was a well-to-do more suave man. What was I missing/forgetting from the intervening books? It wasn't until about halfway through the book that the Fletch character I've come to enjoy popped out of the woodwork as himself.
In stark contrast to the almost no plot line of Fletch, Too, which I found disappointing, this one starts off like a shot. The opening scene of the story starts out with Fletch in an apartment swap and calling the police to report a body of a dead woman in the flat which he's staying for the next few weeks.
"This is the Police Business phone."
"Isn't murder police business?"
"You're supposed to call Emergency with a murder."
"I think the emergency is over."
"I mean, I don't even have a tape recorder on this phone."
"So talk to your boss. Make a recommendation."
The following morning he's on the hunt for the missing art collection of an Italian nobleman who's been kidnapped and presumed dead.
What follows is a nicely developed set of A and B plot lines that rival even those of the original Fletch. (N.B. I've still yet to reread the original, so it's been over 25 years that I'm making this comparison.) The characters are great and the dialogue as witty and snarky as ever. This is Fletch as it was meant to be. Reading this after Fletch, Too brings my faith back for Mcdonald's work.
I just hope the rest are just this good.
The added benefit is that apparently Mcdonald spun off the Frances Xavier Flynn character from this work into another series, and he's a sufficiently complex and interesting enough character that I'm glad the Fletch odyssey isn't really over once I'm done with these eleven.
From a time period perspective, I'll again note, as I did for Fletch and the Widow Bradley, that this book (written in 1976) had some very progressive views about gay/homosexual lifestyle that I wouldn't have expected.