★ 02/15/2021
At the outset of this exceptional series launch from Ames (You Were Never Really There), L.A. PI Hank “Happy” Doll (Happy is his real name; his parents “didn’t think it was a joke”) meets an old friend—Lou Shelton, an ex-cop who once saved Doll’s life—who needs a huge favor: a kidney. He wants to buy one of Doll’s. That evening, Doll, at his second job handling security for a massage parlor, shoots and kills a meth-head freak who goes after one of the masseuses, then attacks Doll with a knife. Later, Shelton appears at Doll’s door, shot and near-dead, and hands Doll a diamond (“for my daughter”). The people who shot Shelton are now after Doll, who becomes enmeshed in an organ-harvesting scheme, in which Doll and his sometime girlfriend, Monica Santos, are meant to be victims. While the macabre seriousness of the crimes and the narrator’s good-nature and sardonic humor might seem to be at odds, Ames makes it work through assured plotting, superb local color, and excellent prose. Readers will happily root for Doll, a good detective and a decent human, in this often funny and grisly outing. Agent: Agent: Eric Simonoff, William Morris Endeavor. (Apr.)
"I loved this book - it's quirky, edgy, charming, funny and serious, all in one. Very highly recommended." —Lee Child, #1 bestselling author of BLUE MOON
"...the first in a dark new private detective series that's a tightly coiled double helix of offbeat humor and unflinching violence."—Sarah Weinman, The New York Times Book Review
"While the macabre seriousness of the crimes and the narrator’s good-nature and sardonic humor might seem to be at odds, Ames makes it work through assured plotting, superb local color, and excellent prose. Readers will happily root for Doll, a good detective and a decent human, in this often funny and grisly outing."—Publishers Weekly
Readers expecting action won’t be let down, and the sparkling yet unpretentious language gives the whole an extra kick. Recommend to noir fans, action fans, anyone who likes a good read.—Don Crinklaw, Booklist
“A MAN NAMED DOLL is so fun and propulsive I didn’t just read it in one sitting, I read it in what felt like a single breath. Happy Doll is a tremendously likable main character, and the Los Angeles he inhabits is vibrantly alive in every detail. I hope Jonathan Ames has many more adventures planned for the newest P.I. in town.” —Lou Berney, author of the New York Times-bestselling NOVEMBER ROAD
"Ames knows exactly what he's doing, and keeps the action kinetic but realistic, while imbuing the narration with sufficient hard-boiled style to anchor things firmly within the tradition."—Declan Hughes, The Irish Times
“If Elliott Gould’s Philip Marlowe landed in the middle of Uncut Gems, you’d have something like Jonathan Ames’s A MAN NAMED DOLL, which expertly mines the dark humor, mordant wit and dreamy fatalism of great LA noir. And at its center is a detective with a battered heart and bruised conscience. I’d follow him, and his dog George, anywhere.” —Megan Abbott, Edgar Award-winning author of DARE ME
“A Man Named Doll is a smart, sharp, and stylish noir for the modern day. In his cinematic tour of Los Angeles that is both gritty and gorgeous, Ames has delivered a novel that is both current and timeless and has introduced a sleuth who fits all the old traditions while creating his own. Crime at its finest!” —Ivy Pochoda, author of THESE WOMEN and WONDER VALLEY
"Ames's keen-eyed observations of the city make this a contemporary noir, it's frequently macabre goings-on shot through with darkly comic flourishes. Motel, money, murder, madness: it has all you need to keep you happy."—The Times
“A MAN NAMED DOLL: a singular read about the peril of having a body. Gallows humor in overdrive on Dilaudid, crashing merrily downhill.” —Bill Beverly, author of Gold Dagger Award-winning DODGERS
"A MAN NAMED DOLL infuses the private eye concept with an unpredictable, vibrant energy, while losing none of the genre’s core, noir elements. Ames is a master of blending humor, pathos, and grit - and A MAN NAMED DOLL is no exception. A truly modern L.A. noir that still manages to feel timeless and steeped in the classics that came before.” —Alex Segura, Anthony Award-winning author of BLACKOUT
02/19/2021
Happy Doll, known as Hank, is a PI and former LAPD cop who moonlights as security for the women who work at the Thai Miracle Spa. He considers himself nuts and tries to maintain his equilibrium by self-medicating, but things get nuttier when a friend who once saved his life, Lou Shelton, asks him for a kidney. Hank is understandably reluctant until an incident at the spa causes him to reconsider. A woman who works there is assaulted by a hulking customer high on meth; the man attacks Hank with a knife, and Hank is forced to kill him. Hank's injured, and Lou's a dying man by the time he reaches Hank again. He's been shot, and leaves Hank with a stolen diamond. Hank only makes things worse by taking drugs on top of painkillers before trailing after the gunman who shot Lou. Before a resolution, Hank and his bartender friend Monica are kidnapped to use their bodies for organ donations; Hank's beloved dog is poisoned; and Hank has screwed up everything. VERDICT The latest by Ames (You Were Never Really Here), creator of the television shows Bored to Death and Blunt Talk, is recommended only for those who want to read a dark novel featuring the adventures of a messed-up PI, high on drugs, who endangers himself with every stupid action.—Lesa Holstine, Evansville Vanderburgh P.L., IN
Jonathan Ames doesn't differentiate character voices as he narrates his mystery. But the one voice that he does use—the inner voice of detective Happy Doll—is so comfortable that it becomes difficult to imagine anyone else portraying the sensitive tough guy. Ames is an author whose storytelling skills go beyond bookstore-reading quality, and he delivers this neo-noir without irony in an offhand vérité tone. As required by the noir playbook, Doll survives beatings, slashings, shotgun blasts—and a few other indignities that fall in spoiler alert territory. He doles out justice while occasionally offering hilarious existential commentary or love letters to his dog. As a bonus, Ames reads a portion of the next audiobook in the series. That's right, Hap's coming back! R.W.S. © AudioFile 2021, Portland, Maine
Jonathan Ames doesn't differentiate character voices as he narrates his mystery. But the one voice that he does use—the inner voice of detective Happy Doll—is so comfortable that it becomes difficult to imagine anyone else portraying the sensitive tough guy. Ames is an author whose storytelling skills go beyond bookstore-reading quality, and he delivers this neo-noir without irony in an offhand vérité tone. As required by the noir playbook, Doll survives beatings, slashings, shotgun blasts—and a few other indignities that fall in spoiler alert territory. He doles out justice while occasionally offering hilarious existential commentary or love letters to his dog. As a bonus, Ames reads a portion of the next audiobook in the series. That's right, Hap's coming back! R.W.S. © AudioFile 2021, Portland, Maine