In this fifth installment of the acclaimed series, Jack Flippo's former mentor, Wesley Joy, calls him from an East Texas jail, claiming to have been set up in a drug bust that left two men dead and his wife missing. When Jack takes his case, he's sent into Wesley's dirty past, complete with a former lover, a shady DEA agent, a burned-out female reporter, and a corpse on every corner.
Flippo, the middle-aged ex-lawyer, tries to help an old friend prove he is innocent, though he may not be innocent, of a murder that may have been committed by the old friend's ex-wife who is Flippo's ex-lover, and is being chased by a DEA agent who may not be a real DEA agent and who wants to be a standup comic. No I have to stop there - this is a plot that defies summary. It's set mostly in Galveston with wonderful dense Texas atmosphere. Swanson shares the Elmore Leonard gift for setting a scene in half a sentence such as a "gray metal table that was loaded with an unsteady stack of papers." Minor characters are nailed in a phrase. In a jail cell one of the warders is "a bucktoothed pale man who looked to be a corpse-in-training" and another inmate is "a truck mechanic charged with raping his fourteen year old cousin." Ultimately the twists and turns of the plot and the breakneck action lose believability, but by then the pages are turning themselves. For some reason there are no more Flippos. Swanson looks young and healthy enough in his jacket photos. Qu'est-ce que se passe?
A good ending to a great series
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 24 years ago
In Galveston, Wesley Joy calls his old protégé Jack Flippo for help. The police busted Wesley in a drug bust that went bad with two dealers dead. Wesley insists he is innocent, as he was the stool pigeon to the cops. He swears his missing wife Angelique knows he is not guilty.For old time sake, Jack leaves Dallas to try to find Angelique. He starts by looking into Wesley's life only to find a worse cesspool than his own. The straightforward case turns twisted as Jack soon finds a shaky Fed and a washed up reporter hoping to further their career off of Wesley's back.HOUSE OF CORRECTIONS is the typical insane Jack Flippo novel that brings joy to his fans. The story line is a wild ride into the underbelly of East Texas wrapped inside a not so simple mystery. Jack remains a miserable anti-hero who the audience will relish for his humorous look at the dregs of society. The support cast add depth to the fifth tale, especially Jack's mentor Wesley. Doug Swanson has written another jocular frantic tale that turns the Lone Star State into Flippo,s personal asylum.Harriet Klausner
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