
Published by W. W. Norton & Company on April 11, 2016
I didn’t like where this book was  going (it didn’t seem to be going anywhere) until about the last third,  when it finally hit its stride. By the end, however, I wondered whether  the author had a plan in mind when he sat down to write. The plot makes a  certain convoluted sense but it is interrupted by events that come  across as filler. Some of the events are interesting but too many are  not.
The early pages of I Don’t Like Where This Is Going provide  what I assume to be an update on events that occurred in the first novel  in the series. Not having read it, I felt a bit lost until the current  story began to move in the direction of a plot. That takes place after  Wylie "Coyote" Melville and his friend Bay watch a woman plunge to her  death at a Vegas casino, where they have gone to chill out until it is  safe to return to their usual Florida residence. In the story that  follows, Wylie and Bay try to get to the bottom of the woman’s death.
Wylie  is a therapist, although his wanderings make it difficult for him to  serve an established clientele. He passes the time by volunteering at a  crisis center when he’s not solving murders or avoiding his own murder.  Wylie is a good guy who likes to help people, a point that is emphasized  by contrasting his goodness to the sleaze of Vegas. That struck me as a  bit obvious and superficial. In general, characters in the novel tend  to preach about society’s evils, repeating stories that are (mostly)  urban legends in an apparent effort to highlight social problems that  are (mostly) overblown.
There are some clever sentences in I  Don’t Like Where This Is Going, some amusing observations of Vegas  (admittedly an easy target), and a few action scenes in the novel’s  second half that generate excitement. Unfortunately, those positive  attributes are balanced against extended chunks of the novel that seem  purposeless.
RECOMMENDED WITH RESERVATIONS