IQ
‘The Holmes of the 21st century’ (Daily Mail)
by Joe Ide
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Pub Date 10 Aug 2017 | Archive Date 5 Mar 2020
Description
'Joe Ide is the best new discovery I've come across in a long time. And Isaiah Quintabe is the kind of sleuth not seen on the mystery landscape before.' MICHAEL CONNELLY
THE TIMES CRIME BOOK OF THE MONTH: 'Full of humour, originality and high-quality writing'
WINNER of the ANTHONY AWARD for Best Debut, the SHAMUS AWARD for BEST FIRST P.I. NOVEL. the MACAVITY AWARD for Best First Novel; SHORTLISTED FOR THE 2017 EDGAR AWARD and STRAND CRITICS AWARD.
East Long Beach. The LAPD is barely keeping up with the high crime rate. Murders go unsolved, the elderly are being mugged, children go missing. But word has spread: if you've got a case the police can't - or won't - touch, Isaiah Quintabe will help you out.They call him IQ. He's a loner and a high school dropout, his unassuming nature disguising a relentless determination and a fierce intelligence. His clients pay him whatever they can afford, a new set of tyres or some homemade muffins. But now he needs a client who can pay. And the only way to that client is through a jive-talking, low-life drug dealer he thought he'd left behind...
Available Editions
EDITION | Other Format |
ISBN | 9781474607186 |
PRICE | £8.99 (GBP) |
PAGES | 336 |
Featured Reviews
Top marks. Must read.
Completely delicious! A fabulous journey into Tarantino-esque dialog and characters, a bling noir, a poor black's Sherlock and money-driven, a'hole Watson, a completely guilty pleasure.
The two main threads of the story: 2005 -Isaiah after a terrible loss slowing bonding/hating Dodson, and 2013 - the bling noir of them "working together" to solve the mystery. Both threads worked well for me, the first tragic and inevitably sad and somewhat desperate, and the second more like a Sherlockian mystery, but with a "knownledge base" suited to the hoods of modern L.A.
I thoroughly enjoyed this tale all the way through, but I must admit the first half of the book had better pacing and fun.
Top marks. Must read.
I thought this was really good. IQ is a very well written, exciting and sometimes funny book which also paints quite a penetrating picture of rapper and gang life in LA.
The IQ of the title is Isaiah Quintabe. He is a moral, highly intelligent young man who has become a sort of unofficial detective to his community of poor black people in LA. He also has to deal with very rich rappers and gangsters, and with the gangs which are an endemic part of life in his area. He deals with a number of cases with his sort-of-sidekick Dodson, who is not moral by any means, creating a great comic tension between them. Principally, they are engaged to find out who is trying to kill a prominent rapper. The story is well paced, gripping and neatly intercut with the story from an earlier time which eventually explains how IQ came to be as he is.
The book is very well written, with elements of Sherlock and also of The Sellout, although it's different from both. The setting and dialogue are exceptionally well done. I liked this little early exchange, for example, between Isaiah and a young woman he knows, which I found funny and also insightful about attitudes:
"I'm an up-and-comer, you know what I'm sayin'? I was *born* to be a celebrity. I should have the spotlight all over me."
"Spotlight all over you – for what?" Isaiah said.
"What do you mean for what? That Kardashian girl's booty could fit *inside* my booty and you talking about for what. You know she made thirty million last year?"
(Do be aware that the language is appropriate to the setting, so the f-word appears frequently as do a lot of other swear words. I think it's absolutely right in the context, but if you're offended by it, then this won't be for you.)
This looks as if it will be the start of a great series. I'll be looking out for the next one, and I can recommend IQ very warmly.
(I received an ARC via Netgalley.)