The story here is about a young man on indefinite recuperation leave from the navy after losing his memory. The book starts in a sanitarium in Southern California where Lieutenant Bret Taylor is under the care of his potential fiancé, slightly older screenwriter and divorcee Paula West. His situation is very complex. He and Paula fell in love but just before he went back to sea, he started a big fight and then stormed off, got super drunk and married some chick he met in a bar. When he came back to see her 2 years later after his ship was blown up, he finds her murdered in the bedroom of the bungalow he had bought for her. At which point he blacked out and lost his memory.
Paula West, has fallen in love with him and wants to help him so he can move on and they can get married. Taylor has other ideas and takes off on his own to investigate the murder of his wife. At first, there is a lot of heavy Freudian psychology but once Taylor starts the investigation we get into the excellent sleuthing of Macdonald. I always love the investigating in his books, just great characters in interesting locations and rich, nuanced dialogue to dig out the clues.
The plot is not all the well thought out and thus doesn't resolve very well. There is not much of a mystery and after a feint of distrust we get a anti-moralistic ending that is quite dark and noir. It's not super effective and a bit muddy how we are supposed to take the ending. The route getting there is mostly enjoyable, though a bit heavy on the psychoanalyzing.
The Three Roads feels like Macdonald is still trying to find his voice and his ideas. The psycho-babble comes on way too thick, at one point almost feels like he is writing an essay. It is sprinkled with Chandler-esque critiques of modern LA society, but they come on way too strong. And there is no morals centre here so you kind of end up not caring. On the positive side, the writing is well-paced and engaging. The people are believable and unique as are the locations. You really get a feel for LA at the end of the war. This Macdonald guy may have some chops.



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