Sep 4, 2025 2:07 PM
If you're a fan of prestige TV, you may recognize David Simon's name as the creator of The Wire. If you're a true aficionado of prestige TV, you may also recognize him as the creator of Homicide: Life on the Street, which ran on cable in the 90s. That show was born of this book, and this book was born of Simon's time as a reporter in Baltimore. He brings to his book what he later brought to his TV series: sweeping vision counterbalanced against intimate details, barely-disguised political commentary, and sandpaper-dry humor.
In fact, Simon brings so much of that stuff to Homicide (the book, not the show) that it becomes a little unwieldy. This is a long book, clocking in at roughly 600 pages, and I don't think it fully merits that length. Could it be that the length is meant to numb the reader in much the same way as the fourth act of Bolaño's 2666? Possibly, but again, I am a TV watcher, and easily bored.
In all seriousness, though, Homicide's length is a detriment, though not a major one. If 2666-esque repetition is the point, then I don't think it's executed quite as well. It's a case of intentionality: whereas 2666 deliberately made the murders nigh-indistinguishable, Homicide makes them all very interesting. The particulars of crime scene examination, interrogation, and charging suspects are almost fetishistically explained. I don't buy into the claims that Simon's work is copaganda (God I hate that word), but it's hard to come away from this book without at least a passing sense of respect for the detectives' abilities and the rigors of their work. If there is a central thesis to this book, it may simply be that homicide investigation is really, really, really tough, that it demands a hell of a lot from the people who do it for a living, that they're often stuck in impossible situations, and that those situations often lead to people – suspects and detectives alike – getting screwed. The job's a bitch, but it must be done.
One of Simon's greatest strengths, in 1991 as in the present day, is in his explication of environments and people. In one particularly impressive chapter, he charts the course from lowly homicide detective up through the ranks to the police commissioner, demonstrating the relationships between various levels of command and the pressure they exert on each other from both above and below. That's the real meat of this book: its occasionally tedious length allows for an expansive view of a subject that is, believe it or not, very relevant to people across various social strata. Someone will always be killing someone else. Just wait and watch the headlines, and pray to God that your local homicide unit has a good clearance rate this year.