As the novel opens, it is a record-hot Memorial Day when Miss Cynthia Summer calls Police Chief Mario Balzic to say that she hadn't seen one of her student roomers. Balzic discovers Janet Pisula's body on the floor of her room, a blank sheet of typing paper on her stomach.....
Carl Constantine Kosak is an American mystery author known for his work as K.C. Constantine. Little is known about Kosak, as he prefers anonymity and has given only a few interviews. He was born in 1934 and served in the Marines in the early 1950s. He lives in Greensburg PA with wife Linda.
This is the first Balzic book I've read, so it took some time to get to know the characters and absorb the style. I was enjoying it but about halfway through the investigation,the main character takes a little side trip to a bar, talks philosophy with two different characters, gets in a bad mood and then figures out the answer
I just couldn't get in to this volume in the Mario Balzic series. In the past, I've found Mario's attitude and group of friends and colleagues rathering interesting. But this whole book just was depressing. When a young girl is murdered in her boarding house, a sheet of blank paper is found on her body. What is the significance? Is there any significance? Frankly, I gradually got to the point I didn't care.
Written in the 1970s, the view of 1970s academia was hard to read. I attended college during this same time, and, although I did have a few professors that might have fit in with those portrayed here, thank goodness there weren't that many.
To further the depressing aspects of this book, the murdered college student had been very smart as a child, then was in an automobile accident that killed her parents. Now still suffering from the aftereffects of both trauma and traumatic brain injury, her thought processes no longer function with agility and others find her "slow". But the fact that no one in the boarding house seemed to talk to her or know anything about her was tragic.
I will try the next volume in the series, since I've liked the other volumes more. This one might appeal to others liking a more psychological twist to their mysteries. The strongest "message" I found here was about expectations of others and trying to live up to them.
I found some used copies of this guy's books, after learning that Stephen King was apparently inspired by his Pennsylvania police procedurals in writing "From a Buick 8." I am reading them chronologically. Of the three, this was the best so far. A lot of the references and attitudes from the 60s and 70s are dated -- sexism, racism, casual police brutality, substance abuse etc. It makes the characters realistic and true to the time, but I'm not sure how much awareness K.C. had of that when he was writing. It rings true, but it's disturbing. There is often not much of a mystery about who the perps are.. It's all about Balzic's personality and how he works the town and the imperfect people in it.
The character and ethical code of Mario Balzic becomes more complex with each book in the series. The third outing includes a new facet to the community with the inclusion of students and teachers from the local college. The series continues to be a fascinating, unromantic love letter to Western Pennsylvania.
Rocksburg series - As the novel opens, it is a record-hot Memorial Day when Miss Cynthia Summer calls Police Chief Mario Balzic to say that she hadn't seen one of her student roomers. Balzic discovers Janet Pisula's body on the floor of her room, a blank sheet of typing paper on her stomach