Margins
The Irishman's Horse
1991
First Published
3.82
Average Rating
267
Number of Pages

Part of Series

''Give an Irishman a horse and he'll vote Tory'' goes the old British maxim at the heart of Collins' latest mystery featuring one-armed PI Dan Fortune. Although the leftist leanings of some characters are reiterated relentlessly, the page-turning plot and its fittingly cynical ending make this one of the best Fortune stories yet. Fortune is hired by Esther Valenzuela, visiting her parents in Santa Barbara, Calif., first to find out who is tailing her and why, and then to trace her missing husband, a young diplomat in Guatemala who has recorded a conversation that will blow the lid off U.S. government involvement with a Colombian drug cartel. Rescued from a shootout by a mysterious figure called the Irishman, Fortune's investigations involve him in a clash between the CIA and the local police force, and lead him eventually into the Guatemalan jungle. As Fortune faces up to powerful, covert elements in the U.S. and comes to grips with the realization that power both corrupts and conquers, Collins ( Minnesota Strip ) delivers trenchant commentary along with high adventure.
Avg Rating
3.82
Number of Ratings
11
5 STARS
27%
4 STARS
45%
3 STARS
9%
2 STARS
18%
1 STARS
0%
goodreads

Author

Michael Collins
Michael Collins
Author · 7 books

Michael Collins was a Pseudonym of Dennis Lynds (1924–2005), a renowned author of mystery fiction. Raised in New York City, he earned a Bronze Star and a Purple Heart during World War II, before returning to New York to become a magazine editor. He published his first book, a war novel called Combat Soldier, in 1962, before moving to California to write for television. Two years later Collins published the Edgar Award–winning Act of Fear (1967), which introduced his best-known character: the one-armed private detective Dan Fortune. The Fortune series would last for more than a dozen novels, spanning three decades, and is credited with marking a more politically aware era in private-eye fiction. Besides the Fortune novels, the incredibly prolific Collins wrote science fiction, literary fiction, and several other mystery series. He died in Santa Barbara in 2005.

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