The Chicken Asylum
An Alex Reynolds Mystery
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- $12.99
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- $12.99
Publisher Description
When Alex Reynolds, his lover Peter Livesay, and his mother Jean--occasional freelance operatives for the CIA--are asked to stash an Iraqi military defector in their home, all three are less than thrilled. It turns out the defector is an 18-year-old soldier who has ties to a terrorist organization and, to further complicate matters, is gay. But the real trouble begins when the young man mysteriously disappears, and suddenly Alex, Peter and Jean find themselves in the middle of a very dangerous game, in Fred Hunter's The Chicken Asylum.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
It's hard to imagine readers of any persuasion gay, straight or lovers of mysteries getting much pleasure from Hunter's fifth book (after 2000's National Nancys) about freelance designer and occasional CIA helper Alex Reynolds, whose forays into crime-solving always end in tears and promises of "Never again!" The humor and dramatic content are on the level of an average episode of "Bewitched" or "I Dream of Jeanie" two television shows that tried to spoof the sitcom genre by giving their white-bread heroines magic powers. Hunter seems to think that by populating his fictional universe with a gay couple ditzy, decent Alex and his bluff, buff partner Peter and by tossing in the lugubrious figure of Alex's mother, Jean, a tedious stage Brit who does everything but sport a parrot and an eye patch, he can get away with a limp plot, painfully coy dialogue and secondary characters so sketchy as to be almost invisible. Alex and Peter's CIA friends house a young Iraqi terrorist defector in our tiresome trio's happy Chicago home as part of some illogical and ultimately not very interesting intelligence operation. Things go typically awry. James, Peter and Jean try to right the wrongs of their imperialistic employer (dressing the Iraqi in drag and endangering their lives along the way); and its worst sin the book undermines its own anemic anti-government message by encouraging readers to empathize with the scheming, smarmy CIA agents. No more madcap capers concerning grim foreign policy realities, please. FYI:Hunter is also the author of the Ransom/Charters series.