Bad Move: A Novel (Zack Walker)
Bad Move: A Novel (Zack Walker) book cover

Bad Move: A Novel (Zack Walker)

Mass Market Paperback – April 26, 2005

Price
$8.99
Publisher
Bantam
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0553587043
Dimensions
4.2 x 1.04 x 6.8 inches
Weight
7.2 ounces

Description

"Humorous ... Fast-Paced....xa0the suburbs turn out to be no guarantee of personal safety."-- Booklist Praise for Last Resort :"Last Resort is a moving, bittersweet and naturally funny memoir of a young man's coming of age." -- London Free Press "Engaging...Barclay writes with admirable openness about his dysfunctional family." -- Maclean's "Barclay's straightforward and unadorned prose...lets him subtly convey the crazy-quilt way that life happens: teenage fun bumps into grownup sadness, loved ones can turn troubled or troubling...Barclay's style may seem simple, but the effects he achieves are anything but." -- January Magazine "[Barclay] manages to capture something elusive; the magical, almost ineffable wonder of childhood, where the sense of freedom offered by a nine-horsepower boat, a summer romance or the first serious conversation with an adult offers a promise of life which one rarely shakes off in later years." -- National Post ? In the too-quiet town of Oakwood, only the lucky die of boredom...and new homeowner Zack Walker isn't feeling lucky. Whoever said the burbs were boring will think twice after reading Linwood Barclay's hilarious debut mystery, in which Dad learns the hard way that he doesn't always know best. Zack wouldn't blame you for thinking he's safety-obsessed. True, he masterminded a plot to trade his family's exciting city lifestyle for one of suburban tranquillity. True, even after this strategic move, Zack still has issues with family members who forget their keys in the front door, leave their cars unlocked, or park their backpacks at the top of the stairs--where you could kill yourself tripping over them. Just ask his wife, Sarah, or his teenage kids, Paul and Angie, who endure their share of lectures. Zack knows that he needs to chill out and assume the best for once--but we know what happens to those who assume. When Zack realizes their two-faced developer sent a petty thief to fix their leaky shower, he starts fighting hard to ignore the fact that Oakwood isn't the crime-free paradise he was hoping for. But his brief state of denial comes to an abrupt end when, during a walk by the creek, he stumbles across a dead body. Even more shocking, Zack actually knows who the victim is--and who might want him dead. With a killer roaming around their neighborhood and Zack's overactive imagination in overdrive, he's sure things can't get any worse. But then another local is murdered--and Zack's paranoid tendencies get him implicated in the crime. While his wife is trying to remember why she married him in the first place, and his kids are considering whether it's time to have himcommitted, Zack decides there's only one thing he can do. To protect his family--and avoid being busted for a crime he didn't commit--he's going to have to override his safety-first instincts, tap into his delusions of machismo, and track down the killer himself. "From the Hardcover edition. Linwood Barclay is a former columnist for the Toronto Star . He is the #1 internationally bestselling author of many critically acclaimed novels, including The Accident, Never Look Away, Fear the Worst, Too Close to Home, and No Time for Goodbye . Multiple titles have been optioned for film. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. 1 for years, I envied my friend Jeff Conklin, who, at the age of eleven, found a dead guy. We were in Grade 6, in Mr. Findley's class, and most days we walked home together, Jeff and I, but this particular day my mom picked me up after school not only because it was raining pretty hard, but also because I had a checkup booked with Dr. Murphy, our family dentist. Jeff didn't have the kind of mom who cared about picking him up at school when it was raining, so he struck out for home, no umbrella, no raincoat, stomping through all the puddles in his sneakers. At one point, the heavens opened up and the rain came down so hard the streets flooded. I remember as we were pulling into the dentist's parking lot you couldn't see past the windshield, even with the wipers going full blast, thwacking back and forth on our 1965 Dodge Polara. It was like we weren't in a car, but in the Maid of the Mist, right under Niagara Falls. Meanwhile, the worst of the rain had let up a bit as Jeff, now as wet as if he'd done ten laps at the community pool, rounded the corner onto Gilmour Street. Up ahead there was a blue Ford Galaxie pulled up close to the curb, and stretched out on the pavement next to it, on his stomach, was a man. At first Jeff thought it was a kid, but kids didn't wear nice raincoats or dress pants or fancy shoes. It was a very small man. Jeff approached slowly, then stopped. The man's short legs were stretched out into the street, shoes angled awkwardly, and from where Jeff stood, it looked like his head was cut off at the curb, which really creeped Jeff out. He took a few more steps, the world engulfed in the sound of rain, and shouted, "Mister?" The little man said nothing, and didn't move. "Mister? You okay?" Now Jeff was standing right over him, and he could see that the man's chest was positioned over a storm drain where water was coursing around him and disappearing. His right arm and head were wedged into the drain. Now Jeff could see why it appeared that the man's head had been cut off. "Mister?" he shouted one last time. Jeff confided to me that he wet his pants then, but it was okay, because he was already soaked and no one would be able to tell the difference. He ran to the closest house, banged on the door, and told the elderly man who answered that there was a dead man's head in the storm sewer. The old man had a look at the weather and decided to call the police rather than conduct his own investigation. As best as the police could tell, this was what happened: The man--his name was Archie Roget, and he was an accountant--had left work early and was planning to run a few errands on the way home. He could tell by the approaching clouds that the light rain was about to turn into a deluge, so he pulled over to the curb to get his raincoat out of the trunk. (His wife told police he never went anywhere without a raincoat in the trunk, or a cushion on the front seat to help him see over the steering wheel.) He opened the trunk with his keys from the ignition--this was in the days before remote trunk releases--slipped on the coat, and slammed the trunk shut. Then, somehow or other, he lost his grip on the car keys, which slipped between the iron bars of the storm sewer grate. It was the kind that hugged the curb, where there was a broader vertical opening wide enough to slip an arm in, at least. Roget got down on his hands and knees, must have been able to see his keys, and reached in. But his arm, like the rest of him, was a few inches too short, so to get a bit more length, he wedged in his head, which was, like the rest of him, tiny. And his head got stuck. And then the downpour struck. Just as the wipers on my mom's car couldn't stay ahead of the rain, the storm drains couldn't empty the streets fast enough. They backed up, and Archie Roget's lungs filled with rainwater. The circumstances of the man's death were so bizarre that the story made the papers, even hitting the wires. Jeff was interviewed not only by local reporters, but by newspapers from as far away as Spokane and Miami. He was, at least at Wendell Hills Public School, a celebrity. And if it hadn't been for my dental appointment, I might have been there to share the spotlight. This was my introduction to the cruelties of fate. I moped around the house for nearly a week. How come I never got to find a dead guy? Why did Jeff get all the breaks? Everyone wanted to be his friend, and I tried to bask in his reflected glory. I'd tell my friends at Scouts, a different group of boys from my school friends, "You know that story, about the guy who drowned with his head in the storm drain? Well, that was my best friend who found him, and I woulda been with him, but I had to go to the dentist." No cavities, by the way. A perfect checkup. I could have skipped the appointment and it wouldn't have mattered. The ironies were enough to make an eleven-year-old's head spin. My dad felt there was at least one lesson to be learned. "When you grow up, Zack, you remember to join the triple A. It's like insurance. If that man had belonged to the auto club, someone else would have come and got his keys for him and he'd be alive today. Don't you forget." This may have been when I started developing my lifelong obsession with safety, but more about that later. The reason this whole thing with Jeff was such a big deal, of course, is that finding a dead body's not the sort of thing that happens to you every day. Other than Jeff, I can't think of a single friend or acquaintance who's ever stumbled upon a corpse. Not that I've asked them all. It's hardly necessary. If one of your friends finds a body, chances are good that the next time you see them, they're going to mention it. Right away. It's a great conversation starter. As in: "Oh my God, you won't believe what happened on Friday. I was taking a shortcut, that alley behind the deli? And there's these legs sticking out from behind a garbage can." There are some body-finding circumstances I don't count. Like if you go to check on your ninety-nine-year-old Aunt Hilda, who lives alone and hasn't answered the phone for three days, and find her rigid in her favorite chair, the TV on, the remote on the floor by her feet, the cat climbing the curtains in hunger. That kind of thing happens. That's natural. And there are certain lines of work where discovering a dead body's no big thing. Police officers come to mind. A lot of times, they're looking for a body before they actually find it, so you lose the element of surprise. Finding a body when you're already looking for a dead body isn't quite the same as when you're just out for a stroll. "Finally, there it is. Now we can get some lunch." I'm an unlikely candidate to find a body. First of all, I'm not, unlike a police detective, in a line of work where finding a victim of foul play is a common occurrence, unless you know something about science fiction authors that I don't. And second, when I found a body, I wasn't living in some big city, where, if you believe what you see on TV, people come across dead people about as often as they go out for bagels. I found my body in the suburbs, where, although I do not have actual statistics to back this up, people are more likely to die of boredom than run into someone nasty. I came across a corpse in as tranquil and beautiful a spot as you could hope to find. Willow Creek, to be exact. Where my wanderings often take me. Listening to shallow water cascading over small rocks can clear the mind and help one work out plot problems. But when you're engaged in thoughts of interplanetary exploration and whether God can spread himself thin enough to oversee worlds other than our own, there's nothing like finding a guy with his skull bashed in to bring you back to reality. He was face down, in the creek. And, unlike your typical Law & Order extra who comes upon a stranger who's had a date with destiny, I actually knew who this man was, and who might actually want him dead. A couple of things. Despite how I envied Jeff as a kid, I'd have been happy to go through life without ever finding a dead guy. Because this discovery didn't come with the kind of notoriety Jeff received, but did carry with it the burden of adult responsibility. And here's the other thing. If this body had been the first and last I'd ever come upon, well, this story would be much shorter. There wouldn't be all that much to tell. But that's not the way it turned out. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • In the too-quiet town of Oakwood, only the lucky die of boredom . . . and new homeowner Zack Walker isn’t feeling lucky. Whoever said the burbs were boring will think twice after reading Linwood Barclay’s hilarious debut mystery, in which Dad learns the hard way that he doesn’t always know best.
  • Zack wouldn’t blame you for thinking he’s safety-obsessed. True, he masterminded a plot to trade his family’s exciting city lifestyle for one of suburban tranquillity. True, even after this strategic move, Zack still has issues with family members who forget their keys in the front door, leave their cars unlocked, or park their backpacks at the top of the stairs—where you could kill yourself tripping over them. Just ask his wife, Sarah, or his teenage kids, Paul and Angie, who endure their share of lectures. Zack knows that he needs to chill out and assume the best for once—but we know what happens to those who assume. When Zack realizes their two-faced developer sent a petty thief to fix their leaky shower, he starts fighting hard to ignore the fact that Oakwood isn’t the crime-free paradise he was hoping for. But his brief state of denial comes to an abrupt end when, during a walk by the creek, he stumbles across a dead body. Even more shocking, Zack actually knows who the victim is—and who might want him dead. With a killer roaming around their neighborhood and Zack’s overactive imagination in overdrive, he’s sure things can’t get any worse. But then another local is murdered—and Zack’s paranoid tendencies get him implicated in the crime. While his wife is trying to remember why she married him in the first place, and his kids are considering whether it’s time to have him committed, Zack decides there’s only one thing he can do. To protect his family—and avoid being busted for a crime he didn’t commit—he’s going to have to override his safety-first instincts, tap into his delusions of machismo, and track down the killer himself.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(526)
★★★★
25%
(438)
★★★
15%
(263)
★★
7%
(123)
23%
(403)

Most Helpful Reviews

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An Enjoyable Read

I enjoyed this book. Sure, the circumstances which occur are fairly far-fetched and yes, often I wondered why the protagonist couldn't keep himself from doing things which clearly would have disastrous outcomes. But I also think that everyone knows someone who can't see what the obvious consequences of their actions are; actually, I'm sure we've all done this once in awhile. The protagonist in this novel compulsively brings this type of behavior to an art form unto itself which at times is amusing, at times pathetic and, sure, sometimes you'd like to reach into the book and shake him by his neck. For me, though, this was part of the entertainment factor of the book. There was something compelling me to watch this guy founder, flouder and fail.

This is light reading but it is entertaining; just remember, it isn't Proust or Sartre so if you're looking for something serious or particularly meaningful, take a pass. However, if you're in the mood for some silly escapism with a shot of schadenfreude, "Bad Move" is a book you should read.
10 people found this helpful
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Skip It

Someone named Edna Buchannan (I think, I don't have the book in front of me) called this thing hilarious in a blurb on the cover. Never trust anything old Edna says. What the author has done has stocked the book with "wacky" characters and put it on auto pilot. There is an professional S&M role player/accountant (see a whacky combination, the fun has started already)who the author assures us isn't really a hooker, thank God. A slick slimy real estate developer with mob ties (there's a reach, why is it nobody else ever writes about sleazy real estate developers?) and a slob of a corrupt local politician. With this cast how can the book fail? It's worse that it sounds. I actually ordered a second book by the author without realizing it at about the same time so I have another laughfest to look forward to. Hope my sides can hold out as the belly laughts keep piling up.
10 people found this helpful
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unpleasant reading experience

I remembered Lynwood Barclay as a humor columnist for the Toronto Star and only recently learned he was a best-selling writer of thrillers. I ordered Bad Move after reading the reviews here, understanding that it was a humorous mystery. Someone somewhere described it as if Dave Barry was writing Grisham. Instead of enjoying the main character, perhaps chuckling at his foibles, as I suppose we are meant to do, I just found him incredibly annoying. But then, his wife is awful. But what really bothered me was the constant use of profanity and vulgarity. It just seemed really, jarringly out of place in this book. If I read a hard-boiled thriller, I expect to read a lot of cursing--I imagine thugs and criminals to talk that way. Here, though, we are presented with domestic comedy, but the husband and wife curse at each other in front of the children. Again, if this was depicted as raw, hard-edged drama, I could accept it, but evidently this is supposed to be another feature for us to chuckle at. The whole book was just very tedious--the crime very slow to appear. I didn't finish the book--it was long, slow, and tiresome.
7 people found this helpful
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A new experience for me

Reading this book was definately a new experience. I've never read a novel where I was actively HOPING the main character would get killed. Or at least removed. What IS this book? A not-very-mysterious mystery? A not-very-funny comedy? Honestly, when your main character (Zack Walker)is a whiny busybody with questionable social skills, it's hard to care what happens. After 100 or so pages, I was just hoping he'd get killed. If you want to read something with an irritating protagonist read Fight Club or Choke. But not this. Spare yourself.
7 people found this helpful
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Nothing Funny Here

I love funny books. Pat McManus and Janet Evanovich are funny. So, when I read on the back cover that this book was "riotously funny and irreverent", I didn't hesitate to buy it. I was totally disappointed. I guess humor is in the eye of the beholder but I found absolutely nothing humorous about this book. If I had to describe it, the word I would use is "boring".
6 people found this helpful
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Absolutely hilarious.

The cover states "If Dave Barry wrote mystery, it would be something like Barclay's Bad Move." Which is true, because as I read it I was reminded of Dave Barry's mysteries, which apparently the writers of the blurb didn't realize Barry wrote - though I'd call both this one and Barry's books "criminal capers." However, as a Dad with (so my kids say) a little bit of the central character's tendencies in me, I found Barclay's Bad Move even better than Barry's work. This is a very funny book, enough so that when I read this back in April, '06, I ordered the hardback of the second novel, Bad Guys, without waiting for it's soon-released paperback version. The story centers around Zack Walker, a married father of two, whose attempts at life's lessons to his family tend to . . . go awry. Throw in a few fellows of criminal intent, and you have a great story.
6 people found this helpful
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This would have been a great book

This would have been a good book:

1. If I hadn't known what was going to happen long before the main character did, at every turn. It's hard to have any respect for him (and thus impossible to care what happens to him) when I can see everything coming but he can't.

2. If the premise of him being an idiot made any sense. This guy is supposed to be "paranoid" because he wants his wife to stop leaving her purse in the shopping cart and walking away, and because he wants everyone in his family to stop leaving their keys in the door for hours. In short, he is a mature, responsible adult and the rest of the family are sloppy.

3. If it weren't so crystal clear that the tortured and convoluted plot was just a writing exercise for the author. He set up the action by having the characters do things that people simply never do, which makes it utterly unbelievable.

But I suppose, to be fair, if I'd never read a book before this would have been a good book. As it is, it's just another publishing house oversight.
5 people found this helpful
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Nope . . . a miss

Read No Time for Goodbye,which wasn't bad. Bought Bad Move plus three others like it on the strength of the enjoyable previous read. Knew from the first chapter it was not for me. Seemed amature-ish, boring & totally uninteresting so don't want to waste any more time with further escapades of Zach et al. Unfortunatley, all books are in the "take to second hand bookstore" bag. Waste of money.
5 people found this helpful
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Amateurish

The book is about an obtuse, bungling writer, who cannot help but impose his viewpoints upon his family by teaching them lessons in inane ways. Through much of the book, he is distained by his spouse and children, not to mention the reader. Herein lies the biggest flaw in the book. The reader should care about the protagonist and any discerning one will not.

However, he is not alone in his inanity. He stumbles upon crimes "masterminded" by a criminal, real estate developer and elected official, all who barely seem to possess the mental acuity to properly organize lemonade stand. A few wacky neighbors are thrown in for spice and laughs, although they are too stereotyped and the humor is largely sophomoric.

You have better uses for your time.
3 people found this helpful
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Barclay's become my new must-read author

Zack Walker is a security conscious husband and father of two who moves his family to the suburbs, a cookie cutter house in a new subdivision, to escape the crime and drugs that were becoming more prevalent in their old neighborhood. There are some trade-offs to the move: Zack's wife now has a longer commute, and his daughter has some trouble adjusting, but the increased safety and peace of mind seem worth the price. Problem is, as Zack comes to find out when he runs across his first dead body, the suburbs aren't always the milky white, crime-free zones they're made out to be.

The initial chapters of Linwood Barclay's Bad Move are more about character than action. Barclay takes the time to flesh out Zack's personality so that his quirks are thoroughly believable by the time they land him in trouble. Once Zack makes that initial mistake--so well prepared for in the early part of the book--he compounds it by not immediately coming clean. And once the decision to keep quiet is made, the hole Zack's digging for himself just gets deeper by the hour. It's a thorough pleasure watching his situation worsen with every plot twist.

Bad Move is a great read. The plot is very tight. It's a lighter book, but reminiscent in some respects of Scott Smith's A Simple Plan. I read Barclay's No Time For Goodbye about a year and a half ago and loved it. I think it's time to troll Amazon and find out what else the author has on offer.

-- Debra Hamel
3 people found this helpful