Cover Image: Transitory

Transitory

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Member Reviews

Transitory is a very well written PI noir mystery and the 11th Micky Knight novel by J.M. Redmann. Released 12th Sept 2023 by Boldwood Books, it's 256 pages and is available in paperback and ebook formats. It's worth noting that the ebook format has a handy interactive table of contents as well as interactive links and references throughout.

It's a long running and extremely well plotted series featuring a competent, intelligent, and intrepid PI in her late 40s, well established and ethical. In some ways the style and realism remind me of Sara Paretsky's excellent Warshawski novels, this series featuring New Orleans and Paretsky's featuring Chicago. The settings are well rendered and indelibly woven into the story.

Although it's the 11th book in the series (there are also short fiction pieces collected in anthology form as well), it works perfectly well as a standalone read.

The story contains several different disparate threads which intertwine into an overarching mystery. It's an intricate plot, but not overly complex or difficult. The author does a good job of describing the often stark daily realities of LGBTQIA+ people, especially PoC, where they intersect with the official police and government. As such, much of the book is quite distressing and sad. Many (most?) of the characters are gay and/or trans, and generally speaking, there's a distinct contrast with the straight characters. There's a lot of discussion about wealth and class disparity and racism in addition. Despite that, this is a phenomenally well written book, with a satisfying denouement and resolution.

With 11 books and some shorter fiction pieces in the series, it would be an excellent choice for public library acquisition, or a long binge/buddy read.

Four and a half stars. Excellent. Recommended for fans of PI noir.

Disclosure: I received an ARC at no cost from the author/publisher for review purposes.

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I love the Mickey Knight books so there is no surprise that i liked this book too. I think Mickey is getting better as time goes on and i was pleased to see Cordelia in the story too. Mickey sees what turns out to be murder and even though it is not her case, she works to find out what is going on because the police just wrote it off. This is the aspect that feels dated to me because i don't think or want to believe it would happen today. regardless, Mickey figures it out and gets the answers for her family. I love this character and will always read this series. Well worth the time and effort.

I received a free copy in exchange for an unbiased opinion.

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Without a doubt, this is my favourite read of 2023.
It kept me glued, engrossed and entertained. The storyline is superb. I absolutely love a good crime, this story went above and beyond this.

If you’re after a good series to read, I highly recommend J.M. Redmann's a Micky Knights series.

5 out of 5.

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This was a great read!! I was so excited to see these characters again. I love the angst and realistic dialogue between them. Such a great addition to this series!

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A really great murder mystery. Mickey Knight is a private investigator who witnesses a hit and run of a trans woman who's black, but when she reports it the cops don't want to investigate it. They just blow it off as another sex worker being killed. This is obviously written in a time period in the past where the police tended to write these cases off as lost causes, but this is still going on in the world today.. This story has two story lines that interconnect. This is an action packed read with quite a bit of violence and a lot of drama thrown in. I would definitely recommend this book and I look forward to what's next from this author.

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Transitory is a murder mystery that begins all to familiarly for people in the queer community with the death of a black transwoman being ignored by the police after it is witnessed by private detective Micky Knight. The case leads her back into contact with an ex she hasn’t gotten over yet and neck deep into old New Orleans’ family and criminal drama as she attempts to solve the murder.

This was my first encounter with Micky Knight, the character created by J.M. Redmann. She has appeared in 10 other books, and I think one of the great things about the book was that while I could feel the history of what may have happened in those other novels, I never felt like I was missing anything. I could understand the main character and everything that was happening without any need for a backstory exposition. This is a rare thing in a book series, and I greatly appreciated it.

I am doubly glad of that because it let me slide into a masterfully told mystery that feel grounded in reality, from the nuts and bolts of how Micky does her job, to the relationships in the community she lives in , all the way to the heartache of a person you still love that keeps showing up in your life even though they are no longer with you. Then there is the city of New Orleans which feels like a character in the story unto itself. You feel like you are walking down the streets or having a beer with the inhabitants. You feel like it’s your home when you see it through the eyes of Micky Knight.

The case itself, well two cases that ended up interwoven, are both ones that are based on things that queer people encounter all too frequently. The book opens with the detective witnessing a hit and run that the police refuse to take seriously because they write it off as a transwomen sex worker being hit. The second case details Micky being hired by a grandmother to find a person that she kicked out of her home for being gay. It is a sad fact that most books that feel accurate to the queer experience, always have trauma and abuse but the subjects are handled well. I really loved this one and might have to go looking for some of the other Micky Knight books.

https://www.boldstrokesbooks.com/books/transitory-by-jm-redmann-4091-b

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I absolutely love Miky Knight mysteries and have read every single one. I enjoyed every single minute reading this one. JM Redman does not disappoint as usual and has written another amazing piece.

Thank You Bold Strokes Books and NetGalley for this ARC.

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I continue to enjoy reading about Micky Knight. She is an interesting as well as intriguing character. This read in the series focuses on the so called haves and the so called have nots. Micky stumbles into either a car accident or a murder. As the story unfolds, she with her partner Tully work together to figure out what is going on with trans women and their mistreatment/attacks. There is also some police bias which is unfortunate. There is some Cordelia involvement which makes me smile. I look forward to the next book in the series. I really hope Micky Knight does not end here.

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Private investigator Micky Knight is hired by a homophobic, racist, and classist wealthy grandmother to find her gay grandson. Years ago Peter came out to the family where he was promptly thrown out from the only home he had known. While working this paying case, Micky is determined to find out who killed a Black transgendered woman in the middle of the street. Holding onto the dying woman’s hand, Micky is asked to find out who did this to her.

Hand me any three pages of this novel and I could easily identify it as a Micky Knight mystery. Redmann’s noir writing style with introspective and thoughtful prose added to a complicated mystery is her unique signature. You get gritty with a deeply philosophical aftertaste.

I could not put this book down once I started and neither will you.

I received an advance review copy from Bold Strokes Books through NetGalley. I am leaving this review voluntarily.

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This book is about Gay people in New Orleans. Mickey is a private investigator and gets caught up in a murder investigation she witnessed or a Trans woman. She is also hired to find a grandson of a very bigoted woman. The plot involves both cases and intermingles Mickey's investigation of the murder and the missing grandson. Mickey is a 40ish gay woman and cares deeply for the gay community. Her caring is very evident when she will not drop the case of murder even though the police do not care. I found the book very enlightening and the characters made the book come to life. I recommend this book for all caring readers.

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Transitory by J. M. Redmann, and boy am I happy to be able to read book 11 after thinking Not Dead Enough would be the last one in the series.

Great mystery. After Mickey is witness to a fatal car accident it spirals into something much, much more. So happy to be looking over her shoulder as this mystery unravels. Nothing better than Mickey Knight on a case, doing her thing. J. M. Redmann rocks as she always does.

f/f again, no romance for Mickey. After Cordelia, there’s no one else for her.

Themes: New Orleans, trans and black, rich and poor, class privilege.

5 Stars

* A free copy was provided by Netgalley and Bold Strokes Books for an honest review.

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Love a good lesbian crime story and a Micky Knight mystery is always reliable. Opening with Micky witnessing a murder of a trans woman on her way home, disgusted by the cops misgendering the victim, Micky begins to look into it. A gripping story set in New Orleans, which is also struggling with gentrification especially post Katrina. We get great insight into those changes and into communities that are fighting to survive with more dignity and style. Great story, great characters, an ending that had me gripped, and some reflections on being queer when family aren't supportive, the 11th book in this series does not disappoint.

With thanks to Netgalley and the publisher for an ARC in exchange for an honest review.

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I received an ARC copy of this book from the Publisher via Netgalley and voluntarily leaving my review.

Mickey is walking home when she witness a crime she sees a woman getting push out of vehicle then get hit by another. The police thinks it’s another transgender sex worker and not to keen to investigation but Mickey knows it’s not the case specifically how the women was dress. Mickey tells her self she won’t interfere repeatedly but that’s what she winds up doing with help of her friends while she investigate a missing grandson for a client. This was a great mystery with twists and turns and I can’t wait for next one in this series it’ll be so cool to see a crossover with the author Ali Vali characters Cain Casey and Sept Savoie imagine three strong women getting justice.

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Redmann’s character has only improved over time as the series has continued. I love that she’s an imperfect person. It enhances the story for me to see all sides of a character. Redmann does such a good job with her narration and dialogue that I feel as though I am intimately observing the character. Nope, no spoilers, but this story will keep you entertained from beginning to end.
I love how Redmann describes the many locations in New Orleans. It’s a place I’ve never been and yet I can picture the scenes and places as I read. I am a visual reader and it’s wonderful to experience that through an author’s words.
Transitory is as engaging as all the previous Mickey Knight stories, because it is a character driven story and Redmann does well with the continued development of and portrayal of Knight’s character. Her supporting characters will have you cheering for some and certainly not for others. A good mystery with plenty of surprises in store for a reader like me.
I, for one, hope Mickey Knight doesn’t retire any time soon. Just sayin’.

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A long awaited and much welcomed Micky Knight Mystery. The writings of J.M. Redmann are both descriptive and insightful and you find yourself quickly immersed into New Orleans’ landsca

pe, the thought processes of Micky Knight and fully engaged and invested in the story and the outcome.

This story takes us on the pursuit of justice - for the victims, their families and friends, justice against discrimination, the inequities and inequalities within society. A society that is still in many ways archaic and cruel.

We are taken on a journey where we see people’s race, gender, sexuality, social status define how they are treated. The prejudice people are subjected to due to ignorance, fear, greed and the corruption of power.

We are also shown how those who are relegated to these ‘less than’ positions find strength by building communities and families of choice. By supporting each other and being willing to ‘fight back’ against those who are self serving, bigoted, insular and phobic on so many levels.

J.M. Redmann produces dark and brooding mysteries where the complex P.I. Micky Knight does everything within her power to bring justice to the victims. It would be lovely to see Micky have a love interest soon whether that be with her long time love Cordelia or someone else who can deal with the complex Micky.

Thanks to Bold Strokes Books and NetGalley for providing me with this copy of Transitory. This review is given honestly and without prejudice.
P.s. I can’t wait for my pre ordered paperback to drop through my letter box so I can read it again ‘old school’ and add it to my Micky Knight collection.

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Netgalley Review:

I love this series. When this book ended, I was so angry that I would have to wait for the next one, something I'm used to after so many years. Cordelia continues her multiple-book haunting, only slightly more human this time. The mystery/ subject was heavy and not a perfectly balanced non-problematic story, but it did enough work to keep me loyal to my hero Micky. Team Micky forever!

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J.M. Redmann has a great writing style, it worked well overall in the Micky Knight Mystery series. It had a great suspenseful atmosphere and I enjoyed trying to figure out what was going on. And thought it worked in the genre.

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would like to thank netgalley and the publisher for letting me read this book

after a night on the tiles micky is walking back home when she witnesses a murder..... she sees someone pushed out of a car and then the other car behind them runs her over... they dont stop and she is left at the scene and calls the police

the victim is stella

but all the police see is a man dressed as a woman and it goes downhill from there

micky is a private detective and she knows enough to keep out of the way of the cops and she starts her own investigation when she hears all the good that stella was doing in the area...

i thought the actual storyline was very good but felt i was being preached to all the time about how bad transgenders and the black community had it...that is my only bug bear with this book loved the character of micky and hope to read more from this author

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I adored the start of the series from first publication but hadn’t read the last few. I’m not sure why…. The writing is wonderful. Thought provoking, affecting and wonderful. Especially the ruminations on grief.

One of the many lines that resonated…..
When I was young, I sometimes wanted to be a boy, but not the gender, just the privilege. Be able to wear pants, or play outside instead of playing house.”

This is a mystery or thriller not a romantic blend. The various crimes hold interest throughout and there were points where I found the tension almost unbearable. Sometimes because I was expecting something to happen and other times because something was happening. The last tense twist, took me completely by surprise.
As I said I have read these books since the start, I think I fell away when Micky and Cordelia split. They are still split. However I am going to go back and read the novels I haven’t, not because they were needed to get this story (obviously not!) but because I want to read more of this writing. Maybe I am in a better place and could enjoy the mystery element for what it was, rather than what it wasn’t - the continuation of a relationship I enjoyed. (In full disclosure, I am still hopeful and saw maybe a wee crack…. But I might be shipping!)

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Gritty, gay, great - another extraordinary investigation
I always look forward to reading a new Micky Knight mystery. Never a dull moment, exquisite writing, deep musings, thought-provoking investigations, a tortured main character, always a special setting - small wonder that Redmann has several (!) Lambda Literary Awards to her (and Micky‘s) name.
„Transitory“ meets the high bar of excellence the author has set in all of her previous books. I absolutely loved the setting. The backdrop and lynchpin of the story is the contrast between an upper class petty matriarch, entitled white young men and the mostly black, salt-of-the-earth servant class and everyone else who is lumped in with them because they are excommunicated from „polite society“, namely gay, lesbian, trans people esp. trans people! This class divide reaches far back into the southern roots of New Orleans and queer history. And nothing is ever forgotten or forgiven.
The book starts off with a flying start: Micky Knight stumbles home at night, she witnesses a car accident or is it murder? The death of the black trans woman is easily solved inside minutes by the white, biased male police officer: a sexworker got her „due“ - or in his words and Micky‘s thoughts: „Almost asking for it, if you ask me. Something wrong with him to dress like that. Her. I was silent“
But never underestimate Micky Knight: working another case she starts poking around where only another marginalized person, like an unapologetic butch lesbian, can get answers …Justice is not always easy to attain esp. when a black trans woman is murdered but she will try.
The writing is exquisite (and would have deserved a better proofreading), the musings of Micky are deep, sometimes sad, sometimes humorous, the setting in New Orleans is full technicolor. The secondary characters are simply wonderful and give the story so much depth and insights into our human side.
For long-time Micky-Knight-fans: Cordelia is involved as well. Is there still hope? Sigh.
This book is the 11th installment in the Micky Knight series, but can well be read as a standalone if you must.

Thanks to netgalley and Bold Strokes Books for the ARC. The review is left voluntarily.

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