A review by bookish_notes
Police Brutality by Gregory Ashe

4.0

So, by the time I’m writing this review, I’ve already read this book 3 times this year - first by e-book, and twice now by audio, and it just doesn’t get old? I wanted to say I have a short attention span, but maybe that’s not right. The ending is for sure very memorable and sweet, after a lot of angst and heartache in this book, but.

The mystery aspect. The deduction happens quickly and the arrest is from the sidelines so we’re not really IN the action as say, what happened in the other books. The mystery piece, whatever it was going to be, could be counted on to take a step back from the horrors of The Rational Faculty. That book introduces the events that will define this story’s arc, so that’s only logical. And yet, I still feel like I missed something important.

This is still a solid book, with a great ending for Hazard and Somers that makes it feel enough of a HFN that makes me wonder if this series can be called a mystery or a romance (I like to say it’s both).

I was worried about this book the first time I read it, because while I adore Hazard and Somers, the book’s title was a bit worrisome. Because I wondered how a white author could possibly do right by writing about police brutality? Well, there certainly aren’t many POC characters in this series to begin with, and some parts in this book were definitely OH WHY *facepalm* moments. However, if you’ve already made it this far into the series, none of this would be particularly shocking, at this point, but I think they’re still worth pointing out.

I’m sure I missed something, but I would say that the trigger warnings for this book include blackmail, threats, violence, homomisia, transmisia, racism, misogyny, ableism, mentions of suicide, abuse, revenge, fatmisia, PTSD, mentions of rape and underage sexual abuse, and codependency.

The Bright Lights movement is a menace and just a new name with a new face for a white supremacist group in Wadhredua. They’re up to no good, but when you combine that with dirty cops who like to get revenge on people off the books? It’s a bad combination and two white gay detectives, Somers and Dulac, are guaranteed to run into the worst of them.

Hazard now has his own office for his private investigator business...but he doesn’t really have a name for his business yet and his first paying client winded up kidnapped and almost murdered, so, Hazard doesn’t have a great track record with his new business. The PI business grows by word of mouth, though, so who better to show up on his door than a former colleague - Walter Hoffmeister.

Hoffmeister has always been nasty, a very particular kind of nasty you never want to get on the wrong side of. And this book proves that tenfold. It’s hard to sympathize with him being worried for his life and hiring Hazard to investigate what’s going on. And I guess I don’t really feel anything for him at all except for disgust.

Because this is a top notch Hazard and Somerset book, we can’t just have one mystery going on, but expect multiple plots happening at once. I love seeing how the story weaves all of these together. Hazard and Somers have to find what’s right for them going forward in both their professional and personal lives. Hazard not only with his PI work, but also that side of him that can’t back down for a mystery and the small town of Wahreda never seems to fail to deliver. Somers and Dulac have their jobs to do, but when Hazard starts getting tangled into all of it? Well, let’s just say Dulac’s very presence doesn’t make anything better.

And what’s with Dulac anyways? There’s just fishy about him. Is he really just some frat boy who likes sleeping around, or is there something more? Upon my re-reads I’m just not convinced Dulac is as innocent as he seems. His first appearance in The Rational Faculty was a hardass on his first day of work, but the suspect thing was the coffee he got for Somers. Doing research on his partner and knowing the exact way Somers takes his coffee? There’s also the constant descriptions of Dulac looking all innocent until the last moment when you think he might not be. And also the way he treats his partners is a bit...ridiculous. To put it kindly. Would it be too easy to suggest he’s the Keeper of Bees? Sure. Am I ruling him out though? NOPE.

Anyways, with Hazard and Somers, they’re still in their honeymoon phase of their relationship, as their neighbor Rebeca says. They haven’t really shown the bad parts of themselves to each other yet. Or at least not as grown-ups. We know how they were as kids and how awful Somers USED to be. But now is brand new territory.

Hazard is still depressed and hasn’t gotten to see a therapist for the events in July from the book, Criminal Past. Somers is dealing with going to work and not seeing Hazard everyday, and only just finally starting to not worry about how he’ll find Hazard once he returns home from work.

It’s a lot of growing pains for Hazard and Somers. But good ones. Necessary ones. And that makes the ending of this book pay off spectacularly.

And talking about that ending, I do love that Cora isn’t some evil ex-wife stereotype, but is actually really lovely and I love all her interactions with Hazard and Somers now that things have settled between all of them. I couldn’t have imagined Cora’s had it easy either when caught in the whirling romance of Hazard and Somers, so do I hope she gets her HEA too? Of course! I wish her only the best. Evie remains adorable and the best child.

The audiobooks are narrated by the great Tristan James. I’ve listened to his narrations before, but considering how many hours combined the Hazard and Somerset books are, I’ve definitely listened to him AS Hazard and Somers the most. And he really embodies who Hazard and Somers are and it’s hard to read these books in text without his voice in my head for all the characters. Is that creepy?

I think one of my all-time favorite parts in his narrations though happens in this book. It’s when a certain someone gets his nose broken and the voice for that character’s broken nose is HILARIOUS. I had to go back and replay it a couple times. And bookmark it, of course.

The ending to the mystery aspect of this story seems a bit...ableist. It doesn’t sit right with me at all. So. Make of that what you will.

I’ve mostly delayed writing a review for this book because of the events happening in the world. And it just didn’t feel right to write a review for this book. I don’t think this book necessarily glorifies the police and makes them some holier than thou entity you should respect out of some misguided sense of justice. This series doesn’t shy away from showing that cops are bad and prone to taking bribes. I mean, that’s how Hazard winded off the force and going into being a private investigator now, right? But I think this series does have moments that takes the side of cops because that’s what Hazard used to be and it’s something that Somers is now. Hazard and Somers are good people just trying to solve murders, but...well. I like thinking of these mystery books as the fiction that they are and something that doesn’t reflect real life. Because at the end of the day in real life? ACAB. I adore Hazard and Somers but I think it's also important to remember that they're fictional characters and loving them isn't an endorsement for the jobs they play.