Review by Booklist Review
Peter Diamond is plagued by bad karma. Formerly detective superintendent of police in Bath, he's sunk to being a security guard at Harrod's--until a small Asian child is found in the area of the store Peter patrols. Out of a job once again (security breaches are no laughing matter at terrorist-obsessed Harrod's), Diamond becomes intrigued by the Asian child, who is autistic and who remains unclaimed despite massive publicity. What starts out as a kindly effort to restore the child to her parents turns into an international adventure as Diamond travels from London to New York to Japan and confronts millionaire sumo wrestlers, unethical drug researchers, and corrupt businessmen. Like Nero Wolfe, the corpulent Diamond has a rapier-sharp mind and a keen instinct for ferreting out the truth. Unlike the grumpy Wolfe, Diamond is a lovable hero whose heart of gold, lugubrious dignity, and disastrous antics will keep readers laughing. An inventive plot and stylish prose also contribute to making this another winner from a veteran crime author. ~--Emily Melton
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
Lovesey brings back Peter Diamond, the likable, pudgy London copper introduced in 1991's sparkling and precisely plotted The Last Detective . Stripped of his rank, Diamond is working as a Harrods' rent-a-cop--until a young Japanese girl is found hiding in the store during his watch and he receives another pink slip. With time free, he investigates the identity of the youngster, now named Naomi, who remains silent and unclaimed. When she is abducted, Diamond traces her to New York and Japan where a Sumo wrestler agrees to bankroll the ex-copper's highly unofficial investigation. Lovesey's grip on the plot never loosens as Diamond, with gentle humor, bluffs his way past authorities by feigning a clout he no longer possesses. At the beginning of the book, a drug company is rocked by both the death of its president and an explosion at an Italian chemical plant. The ensuing corporate power struggle suggests to ever-observant organized crime factions that a buck might be made, and a murder is arranged. How this fits into the moving tale of the mute girl who draws diamonds on paper to symbolize her new friend is clarified only near the conclusion. It's a powerful moment in a book that, without gimmickry or cross-genre splicing, delivers superb, unashamedly traditional crime writing. Lovesey's mysteries have won awards in England and France; he has previously been nominated for an Edgar, as he could be again for this fine tale. Author tour. (Oct.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review
This Peter Diamond title follows The Last Detective (Doubleday, 1991), which introduced the policeman-turned-security guard. Because a small Japanese girl is found asleep in Harrod's during Diamond's night shift, he loses his job. When he then attempts to establish her identity, someone kidnaps her. (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review
Curmudgeonly Peter Diamond (The Last Detective, etc.) returns, now ex-CID and recently fired from Harrods' security force for failing to discover an abandoned Japanese girl left overnight in the furniture department. The child, still unclaimed weeks later, is probably autistic, and Diamond's efforts to befriend her lead to a tantalizing clue--and to the help of visiting sumo champion Yamagata. Meanwhile, in New York, the death of Manflex Pharmaceutical's chairman elevates the man's hippie-ish son David to CEO--to the dismay of second-in-command Leapman, who's chummy with the Mob. When the little girl is abducted in London, Diamond follows her trail to New York, winds up smack in the middle of a New York homicide (to the chagrin of the NYPD) and enmeshed in Manflex's plan to introduce PDM3--a revolutionary brain-cell rejuvenator drug with disastrous side effects. Bodies pile up as Diamond wings his way to Yokohama in pursuit of the girl--whose safety is assured with Yamagata along. The irascible Diamond shows a touching tenderness toward the autistic children he meets here--and his foray into pharmaceutical R&D ethics and funding is chilling. Polish up the Gold Dagger; Lovesey's angling for another.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.