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Mitch Roberts

Created by Gaylord Dold
(1947-2018)

Brooding MITCH ROBERTS is the hero of one of the best–and most criminally overlooked–private eye series of the 1980’s. The first six books in the series were all paperback originals, the first put out by Avon, the next five by Ivy Books,  that seemed to have vanished with barely a trace.

Hopes (on my part, at least) that once the series was (finally) picked up for hardcover publication it would (finally) receive the attention it deserved from critics and the broader reading public turned out to be wistful thinking.

Mitch works the Wichita, Kansas area in the late fifties. He’s a solitary kinda guy, a lonely man with simple tastes: baseball, chess, fishing, reading. He has an office next to the local barber shop and lives across from the local ballpark. He enjoys a good game of poker with the boys or a doubleheader on a warm summer evening now and then.

Simple pleasures, then, but not a simple guy. In Mitch’s case, still waters run deep. Alone at home, he reads heavy-handed philosophical texts by Heidegger et al, and he’s haunted by his World War II experiences and the violence that still seems to surround him. A finely detailed if bittersweet rendering of a time and a place; an era that we usually take for granted as being quieter and calmer, somehow more innocent than the present. But these books are about a man living a life of (mostly) quiet desperation, trying to come to grips with the underlying chaos and corruption and sorrow that turns our glib nostalgia into a cheap lie; trying to rise above it all, but failing more often than not.

These are wonderfully written books, occasionally overwritten, perhaps, but other times the metaphors, the similes and the poetic flourishes are just stunning, with Dold rendering potent scenes of such fragile pastoral beauty and small town tranquility that you wish you could be sitting in the bleachers with Mitch, watching the local team, smelling the freshly mown grass, and sipping a cold beer out of a paper cup. But those scenes of beauty and peace are just a part of it–there are also scenes of pure, brutal evil so vivid you can begin to doubt any other world ever existed.

Perhaps author Gaylord Dold was growing doubtful and frustrated himself, because by the time of the last paperback original, 1990’s Disheveled City, he had more-or-less brought the series to a close.

Mitch had found peace (or at least a reasonable facsimile), packing it all in for a small place in Colorado, where he raises a few horses, works irrigation and “tries to keep busy,” occasionally taking a P.I. job in town to make ends meet. And that seemed to be it.

And so, unexpectedly, three years later, somebody (St. Martin’s Press) finally gave Dold a hardcover contract, and it was back into the breech.

Only problem? Mitch had been more or less put out to pasture. So, what to do?

Enter Mitch Robert Version 2.0.

What I like to call “The World Beat.” Even the cover artwork changed.

In the first hardcover, A Penny for the Old Guy (1991), Mitch travels to England to visit the widow of an old Army busddy, and ends up investigating the murder of her son (and Mitch’s godchild). And he travels even further in latter books, to Jamaica in Rude Boys (1992) and to Zaire in The World Beat (1993). Even in the series finale, Samedi’s Knapsack (2001), with Roberts finally on his way home, after living for several years in London, to his beloved Colorado ranch, he’s waylaid and ends up in Haiti.

The bleak, claustrophobic small town bitterness of the earlier books, narrated in tough, pulpy but often poetic first person, was replaced by a glibber, dryer, globetrotting sense of world-weary sorrow–related in a cynical–but still poetic–third person. But they’ll still break your heart.

Somehow, I don’t think we’re in Kansas anymore.

 

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Gaylord Dold was a practising criminal defense lawyer in Wichata, Kansas,  who gave up practicing law to write novels (and later, travel guides). He was born in Lawrence, and spent his preschool years in Wichita before moving with his parents to southern California, although his family moved back to Wichita in the 1960s, where he graduated from high school. He received his bachelor’s degree in German from the University of Kansas in 1969, his master’s in philosophy from KU in 1971, his law degree in 1973 from the UC Hastings College of the Law in San Francisco, and a degree in international law from the London School of Economics. Best known in these here parts for his Mitch Roberts series, he also written several non-private eye novels, including Bay of Sorrows (1995), Schedule II (1996), The Devil to Pay (1998), Six White Horses (2002) and The Last Man in Berlin (2004), as well as a memoir, Jack’s Boy: An Alcoholic Childhood (2014).

But man, those Mitch Robert books–especially those first six–were something special.

STRAIGHT FROM THE AUTHOR’S MOUTH

THE EVIDENCE

UNDER OATH

NOVELS

COLLECTIONS

FURTHER INVESTIGATION

THE DICK OF THE DAY

Report respectfully submitted by Kevin Burton Smith. And thanks to Phil Gaskill for helping me put my T’s in the right place.

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