Kevin Tipple and I are both fans of Steven F. Havill’s Posadas County mysteries. I’ll admit, I preferred the earlier ones in the series. That often happens. No Accident is the 25th in the series. Thank you, Kevin, for another review with no spoilers.
No Accident: A Posadas County Mystery by Steven F. Havill opens with Undersheriff Estelle
Reyes-Guzman dealing with the aftermath of a brutal bar fight at the Broken Spur Saloon.
Johnny Rabke is drunk and bleeding heavily, a tourist family of four is traumatized, and the
unconscious combatant on the floor is Pablo Ramirez. He had pulled out a knife after exchanging
insults, Johnny Rabke had swung a pool cue at least once, and had also ended the fight by
throwing a billiard ball and nailing Ramirez in the right side of his head.
That fight and the charges and everything around all that becomes secondary as does life in
Posadas when she gets a midnight call from her son, Francisco. Her first thought is that
something has happened to her grandson but she can hear him in the background and so she
knows he is okay. Instead, the call is about her other son, Carlos, and his wife, Tasha.
Francisco explains that Carlos and Tasha were on their tandem bike out in California and were
run down. Both have suffered series injuries and are in the Temerly Trauma Treatment Center in
Briones, California. Tasha is doing a little bit better than Carlos who is still in surgery and in a
very bad way. Francisco and his family are headed to the airport in New York to board their
private jet. They plan to fly to Posadas and pick up mom and dad, Estelle and her husband, Dr.
Francis Guzman, and go to California to be there for Carlos and Tasha.
Before long the entire group is on the ground in California. As it happens, Eddie Mitchell is a
captain with the Briones Police Department and supervising the investigation as it is clear that
this was no simple hit and run. This was definitely attempted murder. Not only were they run
over once, the driver backed up and hit them a second time. Not only does he want Estelle and
the family to be fully supported as they await to see if Carlos survives his life-threatening
injuries, Mitchell is determined to find the guilty party or parties and get them off the street and
in custody.
To do that, he is going to walk a tightrope as he wants Estelle’s help, but she has no authority in
California. He also knows how she is and does not want her independently pursuing her own
lines of inquiry or doing anything that could give a defense lawyer ammunition at trial. Things
get more complicated quickly as a body is found that could be tied into the case.
What follows is a complicated read that shifts back and forth from the hospital and the patients to
the actual investigation of the crime. While there are the occasional brief contacts with the folks
back home, the vast majority of the novel takes place out in California. Along the way, the author
spends considerable time on family dynamics, the predatory behavior of some men towards
women, and other issues as the investigation moves forward on multiple fronts. It is not until the
last chapter and the final eight pages that the initial event that started the book is resolved.
Overall, while not the best read in this long running series, No Accident: A Posadas County
Mystery was entertaining and enjoyable. Though the tale was interesting, this reader missed the
New Mexico setting which is often so effectively used a character in its own right. This reader
was also frequently reminded of the idea that it is good to have friends, but having plenty of
money to deal with emergencies helps too. So too does having your own doctor in the family.
My print reading copy came by way of Aubrey Nye Hamilton who sent it to me after she had
read it. Yet another way Aubrey does wonderful things for me and my blog. Thank you, Aubrey.
As always.
Kevin R. Tipple ©2022, 2023
Kevin, thanks for the Havill review. It reminds me that I am behind. One of the best series I have read. Probably an under read author and that is a shame.
It’s such a good series, isn’t it, Jeannette?
This wan’t one of my favorites in the series. I didn’t like that he moved the book’s setting out of New Mexico. I really missed the usual cast of characters.
I know authors like a break, Sandy, but I agree with you. I don’t like it, either, when authors move characters from locations where we know the “usual cast of characters”.
I agree with Lesa, definitely preferred the early ones, but I’ve read them all and will undoubtedly read #26 when it comes out in March.
Thank you all for reading, commenting, and putting up with my bungled format.
Cool to know the next one drops in March. Something to look forward to and I had no idea.
Big time thank you to Lesa, as always, for allowing me to hang out here.
There’s no problem with your formatting, Kevin. The cover art throws off the formatting. It has nothing to do with you. But, the blog would be blah without the cover art.
Thank you, as always!
I think I need to put in an extra space between paragraphs. And, yes, we must have cover art!