There are lots of characters in this novel. If you read several books at the same time as I do (work, home, mobile device while in transit) you might want to highlight some names, particularly at the beginning. It can be difficult to find your place in the story after brief interruptions to your reading.
Just as a preview: Skipper is a nickname for the DA. He is charged with murder after being found in a hotel room with the dead body of Johnny, a gay drug dealer. Given that Skipper called the police, should he have been charged with the murder? The race, and the story, is on. Natalie is Skipper’s long suffering wife, not oblivious to his infidelities. But we are not sure why she is long suffering. Ann, Skipper’s irascible daughter, is loyal mainly to Ann, and is full of surprises. Although the reader develops a sense of confidence that Skipper is not gay, it seems he has slept with or propositioned every female character in the novel (OK, maybe not Ann). Michael, a somewhat rogue lawyer is a partner with Rosie, his former wife who is also a lawyer. Although they are divorced, they are frequently together for comfort sex when other partners are not available. Both are lawyers for Skipper, who tried to sleep with Rosie (but not Michael). Carolyn, the third lawyer in the firm and thus also an advocate for Skipper, has also slept with Skipper. Then there is the growing number of professionals who surface saying they have also slept with Skipper, but all ceased to do so when the sex went rough. Michaels’ brother Pete is a private investigator helping the firm, Rosie’s brother Tony is a local businessman with innocent ties to the criminal element; he only uses his connections to find information to help Michael. Then there is a host of named characters that support Skipper’s growing political ambitions, another host that support the opponents of Skipper, yet another host of social workers concerned with the dead guy and his family, and a few members of the clergy thrown in. As an aside, Michael, our hero lawyer, used to be a priest, so we have confessional anxiety. This was like trying to follow the family tree of England’ Henry VIII.
For those interested, as voyeurs of course, in drug dealing operational methodology, terminology related with rough sex, and the seemingly inherent corrupt behavior of political aspirants this is a novel for you.
Other good news is that this is a novel in a series. I am not good at reading things in order; this was book 2. It was fascinating enough that I will definitely read book 1 (there is an excerpt in this epub). I am just guessing that I will continue with other books in this series and other works by this author. I recommended this novel to my ex-cop colleagues.