Lake on the Mountain: A Dan Sharp Mystery
Written by Jeffrey Round
Narrated by Steve Cumyn
4/5
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About this audiobook
2013 Lambda Literary Award for Gay Mystery — Winner
When missing persons investigator Dan Sharp attends a wedding, he finds himself investigating more than one murder.
Dan Sharp, a gay father and missing persons investigator, accepts an invitation to a wedding on a yacht in Ontario’s Prince Edward County. It seems just the thing to bring Dan closer to his noncommittal partner, Bill, a respected medical professional with a penchant for sleazy after-hours clubs, cheap drugs, and rough sex. But the event doesn’t go exactly as planned.
When a member of the wedding party is swept overboard, a case of mistaken identity leads to confusion as the wrong person is reported missing. The hunt for a possible killer leads Dan deeper into the troubled waters and private lives of a family of rich WASPs and their secret world of privilege.
No sooner is that case resolved when a second one ends up on Dan’s desk. Dan is hired by an anonymous source to investigate the disappearance, twenty years earlier, of the groom’s father. The only clues are a missing bicycle and six horses mysteriously poisoned.
Jeffrey Round
Jeffrey Round is the author of numerous books, including the Lambda Award–winning Dan Sharp mystery series and the stand-alone mystery Endgame. He lives in Toronto.
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Reviews for Lake on the Mountain
34 ratings4 reviews
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5A good story that's engaging but long. Dan is an interesting character and I'm looking forward to getting to know him better.
- Rating: 1 out of 5 stars1/5The only mystery is why this title is listed as a mystery. I was hoping for something like the Dave Brandstetter Mysteries. This wasn't that.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Rating: 3.9* of fiveThe Publisher Says: Dan Sharp, a gay father and missing persons investigator, accepts an invitation to a wedding on a yacht in Ontario's Prince Edward County. It seems just the thing to bring Dan closer to his noncommittal partner, Bill, a respected medical professional with a penchant for sleazy after-hours clubs, cheap drugs, and rough sex. But the event doesn't go exactly as planned.When a member of the wedding party is swept overboard, a case of mistaken identity leads to confusion as the wrong person is reported missing. The hunt for a possible killer leads Dan deeper into the troubled waters and private lives of a family of rich WASPs and their secret world of privilege.No sooner is that case resolved when a second one ends up on Dan's desk. Dan is hired by an anonymous source to investigate the disappearance 20 years earlier of the grooms father. The only clues are a missing bicycle and six horses mysteriously poisoned.My Review: Well, that's fine so far as it goes. The "mistaken identity" is more like a con game's perp being discovered in a lie; the secret world of privilege part is heavily focused on the heteronormative christian right wing's assertion that it alone defines right and wrong.So it's about perfectly cut out to suit my prejudices!Round writes a deeply damaged and badly wounded noir hero in Dan Sharp, and gives him a drinking problem, a miserable proletarian past, and a penchant for dating screwed-up straight rich boys. Dan's not pretty. His appeal to the pretty men he lusts after is in his anger, his endowment, and his complete willingness to cut and run when he damned well feels like it. Means it will all be over and no lingering emotional ties need be fretted over.Take out "proletarian" and it's me. So again, score one for Round in the designed to appeal to me sweepstakes.The actual murder mystery bit comes with two adjunct plots, one missing person case that Dan is going to solve or die in the trying, and one complex self-realization plot: Dan put the receiver down and stared at the wall. The room had shrunk over the last few minutes. He tried to ignore the nameless sorrow under his skin, the gnawing doubts that mocked his hope that life could be a fine thing or that happiness was possible. An acid loneliness came pouring in -- the same loneliness that enticed him to drink and told him he had no friends except the one on the table in front of him.Well, yeah.The resolution of the missing person case, when it happens, makes Dan go on a hard journey into his bitterness about the past. His family life was, um, rough and turbulent. His missing person was under the same sort of spell that Dan was himself, and then *click* a light goes on that illuminates for Dan the murder's shape which had eluded him (and the police) until now:Grief. It was a powerful word beginning with a soft utterance and ending in a feather's caress. There's no way to say it without beginning and ending in a sibilant whisper. Intake of breath or out, it's still the same -- like a verbal palindrome. {The victim} had felt its pull, soft and seductive enough to make him sacrifice himself. He'd given in to its drowning embrace, giving up what he wanted most -- his freedom -- for what he couldn't live without: his boys. In doing so, he'd lost both. There wasn't a prayer or lamentation or elegy in the world that could convey, in words or music, the tragedy that this had brought about. There was nothing that could revoke or undo the senseless horror of what had happened to him....Losing his sons was a threat the victim couldn't endure. Dan, being a deeply loving dad despite his screwed up self, figures out the identity of the culprit, the reason for the crime, and the whole point of his own involvement in the missing person case from the blinding flash of insight that grief is at the heart of all the troubles in all these cases.This is the way I like my noir. Dark, bitter, and with a chaser of sadder-but-wiser. I'll read the next book, and that's sayin' something for an overbooked and underlifed biblioholic.So why not a full four stars? Because the novel, while first in a series, is far from Round's first book. There are pacing and bloat issues. About fifty pages of the book could go and no one would suffer, while the story would gain. Some scenes...notably the resolution of the first death...were rushed and not fully interwoven into the narrative, while others, notably the set-up of Dan's crappy relationship with a man destined to shuffle out of his life in short order, were longer than dramatically necessary to introduce the character flaws in Dan that we need to know about. So a small bit knocked off there, and a bot more for the curiously unnecessary and stunted relationship between Dan's son and the son's best friend, which felt completely grafted on and was unnecessary given how it ended.But I go back to this fact: I will read the next one. I'm looking forward to it, as a matter of fact.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5I'm not sure what drew my attention to this book. If I did I would thank that reviewer because I had never heard of this author even though I pride myself on reading lots of Canadian mysteries. This book reminded me a lot of Ian Rankin's Rebus books, that is if Rebus was gay and lived in Toronto. Like Rebus Dan Sharp is a music buff, drinks too much, hates the city he lives in but can't leave it and won't let go of a case until he has solved it. I hope to see more of Dan Sharp but in the meantime I might check out some of Round's other books.Dan Sharp is a missing person investigator. He is also gay and a father to teen-aged Kedrick. He is dating a heart surgeon who sees Dan when he wants to and ignores him when he doesn't. However, Dan is hoping the gay wedding that he and his boyfriend Bill are invited to will cement their relationship. The wedding is between Thom Killingworth, Bill's best friend, and a Brazilian man. Thom's father went missing 20 years ago, a fact never mentioned to Dan until they get to the Killingworth country home. Right after the wedding (which takes place on a yacht on Lake Ontario) another missing person, the Brazilian groom's sister, takes precedence. When her body is pulled from the lake the police rule the death suspicious which upsets the Killingworths. Soon after, though Dan and the investigating officer have their doubts, the death is ruled accidental. That's not the end of Dan's involvement with the Killingworths as he is hired to investigate the father's disappearance. What he discovers rocks the family and his own life.There were a few things that I found a tad unbelievable in this book. Firstly, I doubt that there are enough missing persons cases to keep an investigator going let alone a whole firm. Secondly, the whole gay wedding scenario didn't ring true for me. I have my doubts that the mother would be encouraging this wedding (especially in light of what we learn later) and make it highly public. However, there are lots of things that did work for me. Dan is a well-developed character and his relationship with his son is spot on. As I said I am hoping to see more of Dan Sharp.(One word of warning for the prudish: there is one gay sex scene that is pretty graphic and there are several other references that may disturb people who are heterosexual. I didn't find any of these scenes gratuitous and they are certainly no worse than many books that deal with heterosexual liaisons.)