The Two Chinatowns
One long flight of macho fantasy
By William Wetherall
First posted 5 September 2006
Last updated 5 September 2006
Dan Mahoney Dan Mahoney (b1947) is a "Retired NYPD Captain" -- and, also according to his website, an "Almost-Famous Author" and a "Heck Of A Nice Guy". Mahoney's first five crime thrillers, beginning with Detective First Grade (1993), feature Detective Brian McKenna, a NYPD cop who's always bucking departmental rules and getting into trouble. In The Two Chinatowns (2001), his sixth story, Mahoney introduces the Cuban-American NYPD detective Cisco Sanchez as McKenna's partner and makes Sanchez the main character. Ruthless Asian gangsThe Two Chinatowns sets a lot of action in the smaller Chinatowns of New York and Toronto, before Sanchez, NYPD's finest, has to go to Hong Kong, the world's biggest Chinatown, to nail his 14K nemesis. The back cover of the paperback edition views the unfolding drama from three angles.
Guess who's coming to dinnerChapters 1 and 2 establish Sanchez's and McKenna's bona fides as tough cops and tough men. Chapter 3 finds Sanchez at Goo Pan, a Toronto Chinatown restaurant owned by the uncle of his fiance, Sue, who has brought him there to introduce him to her family. The idea is to get Uncle Benny to like Sanchez so he can persuade Sue's mother, Benny's sister, to like him too. Things don't go too well at the start when Sue's cousin, Linda, fetches her father from the kitchen to come out and meet Sanchez (pages 17-18).
Flights of fantasyIt gets worse, then better -- or better, then worse, depending on whether you like Sanchez's conviction that he is the best detective in NYPD, which to him means the world. This possibly best barbarian, though, is unable to prevent murderous punks who invade Goo Pan from killing Sue, a stewardess he had met on flights between Toronto, Hong Kong, and Singapore. Unknown to Sue, and even to his partner McKenna, Sanchez had been studying Cantonese at Berlitz three days a week -- with the help of "a Chinese detective in the Major Case Squad, Connie Li" -- so that someday he could impress her. Impress her he did, but tragically for only a few minutes. Mahoney's story rings with barely enough authenticity to numb suspicion that much of the action he depicts is implausible in the real world of international criminal investigation. As a pure escape laced with macho stimulants, though, it is first rate -- something to read on a flight from New York or Toronto to Hong Kong, then leave in the seat pocket for the next guy who needs a fix. |