Monday, October 19, 2009

Even Money by Dick Francis




Ned Talbot is a bookmaker. And bookies are not exactly well loved in English society to say the least. A necessary evil more like. Ned is used to that, but when a mysterious man presents himself one evening after the races and claims to be his long thought-to-be-dead father, then is murdered right in front of him he has lots of explaining to do to a skeptical police audience. And, he has one very puzzling question to answer- Was this man really his father? Why would his grandparents, who raised him, have lied to him his entire life? It also seems that this father of his has really murdered his mother as well.
While Ned is off to find out the answers to his questions we watch as he struggles with his book making business and the large corporations set on swallowing him up. Dick Francis' newest Racing book, Even Money is similar to many of his other books in that it is connected in someway to English Racing. Francis gives a great deal about betting, horse identification and RFID chips, and though the information is great, it doesn't really matter if the reader 'gets it'. It is, after all, the story, the mystery that counts. The story picks up as we head to the end and we see loose ends coming together. Though, I admit, I am partial to horse racing ever since my first bet was placed on a Kentucky Derby winner and I won myself a cherry pie, and the likeable characters of Dick Francis' novels. This is Dick Francis and English style racing at its best.

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