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{{infoboxinfobox1
|title=His Father's Son
|author=Tony Black
|publisher=Black & White Publishing
|date=September 2013
|amazonuk=<amazonuk>1845026365</amazonuk>
|amazonus=<amazonus>1845026365</amazonus>
|website=http://tonyblack.net/
|video=
|summary=Tony Black's first non-crime novel is an unfortunate misfire. It could, and should, have been better, but his portrayal of the Driscol family fails by silencing the mother.
|cover=1845026365
|aznuk=1845026365
|aznus=1845026365
}}
Having safely established himself as a crime novelist, Tony Black has decided to take a brief holiday from the genre. While there's no doubting the bravery of such a move, the real question is whether it is the right one. There are certain facets of crime writing - intricate plotting, frenetic pacing, and high body count - that do not transfer to the world of humdrum realism. And as the contemporary novel focuses on a slower movement of time and a subtler delineation of character, aren't these all the things Black had to eliminate in the interests of genre expectations? So: as far as transitions go, it is a difficult one to make. Has ''His Father's Son'' managed it? Well, the answer is no, not really.