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His comic alter ego, Nick Hoffman, came to the State University of Michigan to teach classes in the English, American Studies and Rhetoric Department and to be with Stefan, his partner. He also wants to make tenure. But his sharp tongue, lack of allies and preference for teaching over research hurts his chances enough if it weren't for all the bodies he keeps discovering.
By the time Raphael's third book opens, Hoffman's career is foundering and sinking fast. His involvement as amateur detective has brought unfavorable publicity to the university, and his chances darken further by simply being within eyeshot of a murder -- this time of a young man killed during a melee between a campus preacher and a group of students.
"The Death of a Constant Lover" -- the title is a reference to 19th-century English novelist Benjamin Constant --is more a novel of university life and politics than a murder mystery. The investigation moves in fits and starts as Hoffman finds himself also dealing with other problems: death threats are being sent to his office mate, a woman hired to fulfill SUM's diversity quota, and the effect on his relationship with Stefan when he is dropped by his publisher.
Raphael's third book is slightly darker than his first two. Hoffman's joie de vive is dampened by the violence around him, making "Death of a Constant Lover" not so much a darker book -- we're not talking about James Ellroy here -- but simply not as bright and vivacious than the first two books. That's not a criticism so much as an observation that Raphael has put his finger on a key problem with the detecting genre. Death is serious business, and cracking jokes like Noel Coward around the body doesn't ring true. And yet, some sense of humor is needed to keep one from turning Gothic. Homicide detectives and crime reporters tend to develop a callous form that can be shocking to those who The tradeoff here is that Raphael has a sure grasp of his leading characters, and "Constant Lover" is a deeper and more thoughtful mystery that approaches the depth of P.D. James or Martha Grimes.
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He denies his parents their right to happiness when they try to move on in their lives, although they are obviously both doing much better apart.
This haunting story indicates that the pain and sorrow of the Holocaust survives, and impacts the life and destiny of so many generations after the event.
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his Nick Hoffman series. If anyone on the [Dorothy-L] list hasn't yet read it: do so,
it's lots of fun, especially if you like send-ups of academe. Like Nick, I'm
an English professor at a state college, so I got a real kick out of the
absurdist drama of academic politics in the midst of which Nick struggles to
figure out who is harassing him and his lover Stefan, who killed an unpopular
colleague, and what the heck is going on with his own unexpected feelings
toward the sexy, brassy, over-the-top Juno.
Using a professor who teaches a class in mystery allows Lev Raphael (the author) to have Nick name-drop all of the latest mystery authors, along with Virginia Wolfe, Edith Warton, Dark Passages, and Titanic with equal humor. I found myself laughing out loud when Nick (after spending too long on Janet Evanovich) wondered if he should simplify his diet (his partner, Stephan set him straight--Stephanie Plum is no role model).
The academic setting is brutally realistic. Unlike business, the University really is a zero sum game and professors play to win--not that there is much joy even in the winning. Still, Nick keeps his sense of humor and deepens his relationships with Stephan, his cousin Sharon, and the strangely attractive Professor Juno Dromgoole (is there a certain Dickensian quality to Raphael's naming?).
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Don't get me wrong, I have enjoyed the author's writing skills in the first four books in this series. He has used wit and satire to spear the pompous world of academe. Unfortunately, in this book, SUM (State University of Michigan) and its inhabitants have become a total lampoon of some Animal House. Things are pushed to the point of straining a person's credulity - Whiteness Studies and neo-Nazi administrative staff.
Add to that the fact that all the female characters from the new provost Merry Glinka to Juno Dromgoole are just caricatures drawn in a very unflattering and unfavorable manner. Only the elderly and infirm are spared the author's misogyny. Which only makes it stranger when Nick, who has spent a lifetime (and 15 years with Stefan) with a totally male sexual orientation, suddenly becomes obsessed with what it would be like to have sex with Juno Dromgoole. I thought this was just an early mid-life crisis, until he developed and equally strange obsession to buy a gun. Good grief, he's turning into another one of the SUMatics!
Talk about topsy-turvy! The characters are just wandering around searching not for the plot, but for some reason why they are there in the first place. I realize that as a "novel" this book is entitled to have an ambiguous ending. But, since the author is a student of the mystery genre he should realize that it's not nice to leave your readers hanging at the close of a 290-page book. Nick Hoffman worked better in the mystery genre. My rating - a full ***** for the author's way with words, but only ** for the book as a whole. Sorry, Nick, even grading on a curve couldn't get you a higher score.
As a final comment, what's with the book jacket illustration featuring the face from a Third Reich sculpture? Taken with the Whiteness Studies and the new storm-trooper staff, does this point to a fascist plot to take over SUM?
It opens with a quote from Rebecca West on the tension between the yearning for "the longer day of happiness" and that which wants to "die in a ccatstrophe that will set back life to its beginning" and "leave nothing of our house save its blackened foundation."
Nick Hoffman's life in Burning Down the House mirrors this tension. There's the normal tensions of his life--torn between the idiocy of academia at SUM (State Univerisity of Michigan and his love of teaching which requires that he not only put up with the craziness of EAR (his department) but struggle for tenure. Then there's the joy of his settled and pleasurable life with his partner Stefan and an attraction to the danger and violence--even the fear--that is becoming increasingly part of life at SUM.
Whiteness studies? Administrative spies?
A Diversity Tree?
Nick is worried about his close cousin Sharon who is recovering from surgery for acoustic neuromoma, more and more he is becoming aware the world is not a kindly place, not a place to be trusted.
He doesn't even trust himself. He's confused to discover--after years of a committed relationship with Stefan--his attraction to another professor. A female one, the ever dramatic, flamboyant Juno Dromgool--who is running for department chair and thinks she's being stalked. She's bought a gun.
He thinks about buying a gun. And having sex with Juno.
Nick seems to be torn between maintaining his "house" or following passion, loyalty--a maelstrom of feelings--and maybe burning down his house.
This is paralleled though and far more painfully by watching the world of SUM--however petty and ego driven it has been--degenerate into something not identified yet, the undercurrent of something symbolized by a drive for "whitness studies" and a "diversity" that is blindly "Christian."
The ending is not an ending, but a beginning as Nick has to make a choice to engage this darkness (and risk losing his present life) or turn away....
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Elements that irked me in the self-conscious LET'S GET CRIMINAL, the first of this original series, are noticeably missing here. For example, main characters Nick and (particularly) Stefan are fleshed out and much more likeable (scatty, enthusiastic, emotional Nick is fast developing into a classic). Their relationship is explored, and I was relieved to see some fallout over the Perry Cross affair (no healthy person takes betrayal as meekly as Nick appeared to in LET'S GET CRIMINAL).
Raphael is refreshingly ruthless in targeting his murder victims from both old and new characters. He sets a lively pace and keeps his amusing cast dancing, while tantalyzing the reader with mouthwatering descriptions of good music, good food, good wine and clever conversation. And I think he makes a smart decision in keeping his mysteries non-gay specific. Nick and the reluctant Stefan are normal, attractive guys (who happen to be gay) caught up in the extraordinary occurrence of murder. It could happen to anyone--though probably not so entertainingly.
I can't wait to see what mischief Nick next gets himself--and the handsome and frequently disapproving Stefan--into.
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