Biker undercover
The combination seemed perfect for me: a true-crime story about an agent infiltrating a motorcycle gang. This kept my attention well, and for good reason. Queen has a lot of stories to tell and the tension in the telling is palpable. Sometimes I wondered if he were exaggerrating for effect, but I never doubted that he told the story as it happened from his perspective.
Sometimes Queen tended to get upon a high horse and approach from a place of moral indignation that I thought fit fictional stereotypes all too well. Just like on TV, the investigation didn’t really take off, and he couldn’t really be effective until the idiots who supervised him shut the case down and ordered him not to continue on. He often expressed moralistic disgust at the practices of the criminals he brought down, and sometimes it seemed as though he defensively justified things to project a certain image. When he describes the gang bringing in strippers to a party and how he went along with it even though he hated the exploitation of women, it rang a bit hollow.
And do I find a little shame in criticizing the work of a man who risked his life to get gun traffickers and drug dealers and murderers off of the streets? Yeah, I do. I read this book purely for entertainment and this guy had to live the story, which for all its expository faults is gripping and dramatic.
Hey, the guy’s not a professional writer, and the rest of us get a little window into a world we’d rather not see except in fiction.