Dennis Palumbo absolutely fascinated me with his new book From Crime to Crime: Mind-Boggling Tales of Mystery and Murder. In nine tales about his Smart Guys Marching Society, he delivers traditional locked room puzzles, red herrings, and clues aplenty for armchair detectives everywhere. But the world he represents in his writing is our present and our world, thoroughly seeded with pop culture references you just don’t find in the Golden Age of Mystery tales by Agatha Christie or Sherlock Holmes.
More than that, Palumbo -- at least for a time -- gave me back one of my childhood heroes: Isaac Asimov. I read all of Asimov’s science fiction stories when I was a kid, haunted the library and the used book stores for his books. I loved the robot stories (I, Robot, The Rest of the Robots, and the R. Daneel Olivaw/Lije Baley novels).
In my late teens, while reading my other favorite genre, mystery, I discovered Asimov’s “Black Widowers” stories in the pages of Ellery Queen’s Mystery Magazine. I enjoyed the brain teasers, the puzzles, the characters, and the dialogue presented in the tales. Most of all, I enjoyed Henry, the waiter that eventually unraveled every mystery brought before the group.
Palumbo’s Smart Guys Marching Society consists of an ex-military intelligence operative turned reporter, an actor, a lawyer, and a psychologist. All four are middle-aged, married men that get together once a month for serious talks, food, and the chance to get away. Inevitably, though, the subject always turns to murder.
There is a fifth member of the group. He’s an older man with lambchop sideburns, an affinity for the Golden Age of science fiction, and who seems to know something about everything in the world. He’s a keen observer, quick with a bit of humor or a turn of phrase, and someone I felt like I knew from the instant he stepped onto the page. This is Palumbo’s homage to Isaac Asimov, of course, and to the beloved Black Widowers’ tales.








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