Deception, by Randy Alcorn

Detective Fiction at Its Best

In a truly stunning addition to his previous novels Deadline and Dominion, Randy Alcorn continues his saga of crime, violence, and justice in Portland with his recent mystery Deception. After having written about journalists Jake Woods and Clarence
 Abernathy in the aforementioned novels, this time around Alcorn focuses instead on detective Oliver Justice Chandler, with the Daily Tribune's columnists playing strong supporting character roles in this twisting, turning, upside/right-side up "whodunit".

In Ollie Chandler, Alcorn has nailed the hard-bitten, cynical gumshoe perfectly, joining CBA contemporaries detectives Joe Box, (Until The Last Dog Dies, How to Skin A Cat, When Skylarks Fall, by John Laurence Robinson), and Colton Parker, (Original Sin, Seventy-Times Seven, Root of All Evil, by Brandt Dodson), as they usher in a new wave of detectives who aren't perfect, have problems with their temper, question their faith, and like their firearms...but are also on spiritual quests to find a sense of being as well. Ollie Chandler is immediately likeable as the sarcastic, witty, clever and oftentimes bull-headed detective, and Alcorn does a wonderful job teetering him between a hurting soul that's searching for peace and a man who's seen far too many horrible things to accept faith too quickly.

Chandler's moral and spiritual dilemmas are real and authentic, and Alcorn pulls a daring move more and more CBA authors are willing to risk these days: though convinced of his need to "follow the evidence, no matter where it leads" when it comes to investigating the claims of Christianity, Ollie remains unsaved at the end, leaving the reader itching for more of the lovable yet sometimes irritating detective, just to see where he ends up.

Related information
  • crime scene investigation
  • investigative journalism
  • forensic investigations