If there is a tagline for Lock Tourmaline, the hero of Point and Shoot, it would be “That man is an asshole!” G. D. Baum is new to the literary world and in this, his first book, he introduces us to his main character Lock. Lock has the uncanny ability to be in the wrong place at the wrong time. Lock is an ex-cop, turned private investigator, who luckily is also a karate expert, which is good because almost no one seems to like him.
Mr. Baum has created an interesting book, made more so with a main character who has the uncanny ability to be in the wrong place at the wrong time. I am still not quite sure, however, how to categorize it correctly. Typical for this genre of writing, parts of it contain the time-honored dialogue of the jaded and ever-familiar ex-cop turned PI character:
- I stood there. The smart thing would have been to come back later. But I didn’t like this creep. First, he was in her life and I was not. Second, he had just closed the door in my face. And third, most importantly, he clearly had something to do with what had gone on last night.
Yet another theme running though the book is a love story; when Lock is not battling the bad guys he is looking after his girlfriend, dying from cancer, and her 15-year old daughter.
In Point and Shoot we meet a number of highly entertaining characters. Lock’s mentor in the martial arts is an aging bouncer for a sexual bondage club with the catchy nickname of Grandfather. His ex-wife is a cokehead who has connections with a New Jersey crime family. A variety of other characters, not exactly pillars of society, round out the motley cast.








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