**A hilarious and poignant novel about growing up, buying in, selling out, and the death of irony.** "*The Narcissism of Small Differences* is one of [Zadoorian's] best. He has become an essential chronicler of the life in Detroit at the beginning of our century." --***Stateside***, Michigan Publ
The Narcissism of Small Differences: A Noir Detective Novel
β Scribed by Dennis Dorgan
- Book ID
- 111069899
- Publisher
- BookBaby
- Year
- 2021
- Tongue
- en-US
- Weight
- 200 KB
- Category
- Fiction
- ISBN-13
- 9781098392284
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
The Narcissism of Small Differences is a noir detective novel about the guiding influences of memory and the subconscious mind. It's also a story about how insignificant the differences are between the defenders of law and order and those who live in the world outside of it. And, while it is also a fast-paced police procedural, in the end this is the story of Conor Delaney, a man who can see into the dark.
The story starts with a traumatized, ten-year-old Conor Delaney sitting at the kitchen table of Grandmother Raven, a powerful Ojibwe Midewikwe. Before he leaves her doublewide on the frozen shores of Lake Superior, she holds a ceremony for him, heals his trauma and dubs him Owl Eyes for his ability to see into the dark.
As an adult, he is the head of Delphi Investigations and Research. In this role he ferrets out corporate misdeeds like bank fraud, money laundering and market manipulation. He will ultimately find that these corporate crimes are at the heart of his first murder case; one that the perpetrator of three gruesome murders forces him into. The police team he joins is headed by his good friend, Mel Thorogood, Assistant Police Chief.
Another of his friends is Dr. Phil, a former Jesuit, psychologist and carney barker, who murdered six abusive priests. He is now a permanent resident at the State Hospital for the Criminally Insane. Delaney thinks him to be among the most moral men he knows. Dr. Phil is still a formidable forensic psychologist and profiles the killer as a malignant narcissist who may be a woman. He also lays to rest the notion of a serial killer.
Mackey Stately is the City's crime boss and a close friend of Delaney's since childhood. He is pledged to help Delaney with this case. Other unconventional friends, including Henri Bouchard, his Ojibwe brother, help him bring this case to a conclusion. The journey to that goal is grounded in St. Paul, Minnesota, but also involves excursions through Belfast, Kansas City, Tulsa, St. Peter, Minnesota, and St Petersburg, Russia.
But it is the journey into Delaney's subconscious mind and dreams that bring the investigation to its astonishing conclusion.
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