The Queen City Detective Agency
Snowden Wright's The Queen City Detective Agency drops a jaded ex-cop turned private investigator into 1985 Meridian, Mississippi, where a real-estate developer's murder and a Dixie Mafia affiliate's suspicious jailhouse death pull her into a web of old-guard corruption — a Southern noir that earns its atmosphere through moral specificity rather than regional sentiment.
From the review
Meridian in 1985 isn't a backdrop Wright gestures at — it's a city whose particular kind of failure drives the plot forward. The town's slide from regional prominence into something shabbier and more porous to criminal money isn't just atmosphere; it's the mechanism. The strip-mall economy that replaced civic pride creates the exact conditions that allow a figure like the murdered real-estate developer to operate, and it's what makes the Dixie Mafia's presence feel plausible rather than pulpy. The setting's decline isn't decorative. It's load-bearing.
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