A Crooked Man.

AuthorSullum, Jacob

By Christopher Lehmann-Haupt, New York: Simon & Schuster, 351 pages, $23.00

In 1991 New York Times book reviewer Christopher Lehmann-Haupt panned Richard Lawrence Miller's The Case for Legalizing Drugs. Miller, he said, "gives aid and comfort to his enemies. What he has written amounts to as good a case against drug legalization as they could have made themselves." This is unfortunate, Lehmann-Haupt said, because "the growing debate over drug legalization is a serious one, with much confusion surrounding the issues and many compelling arguments on either side."

It seems that Lehmann-Haupt has been considering those arguments for a while. The protagonist of his new suspense novel is a Republican senator from Pennsylvania who introduces a bill to legalize drugs. The pro-legalization arguments that appear in A Crooked Man are too sketchy to satisfy opponents of the war on drugs, let alone persuade the skeptical. But the main purpose of the book is presumably to entertain, and in that respect it succeeds. In any case, it is encouraging to see that the topic of drug legalization is by now familiar enough to be relegated to a plot device.

Grief-stricken and separated from his wife in the wake of his teenage daughter's drug-related death, Sen. Nicholas Stationer Schlafer III does not expect his bill will succeed. but he hopes at least to get it to the Senate floor and generate some serious debate. But strange things start to happen, as they usually do in this sort of book. Responding to mysterious pressures, senators who had promised to support the measure start reneging. Schlafer receives several oblique threats, which become more menacing as he investigates the circumstances of his daughter's death.

Schlafer, we are told early on, is a libertarian: "What mattered most to him was that he considered drug legalization a cornerstone of the libertarian political philosophy on which he had run for office and gotten himself elected. If ever there was a case where free-market...

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