House arrest

Michael Lawson, 1948-

Book - 2019

"As the fixer for Congressman John Mahoney in Washington, D.C., Joe DeMarco has had to bend and break the law more than a few times. But when Representative Lyle Canton, House Majority Whip, is found shot dead in his office in the U.S. Capitol and DeMarco is arrested for the murder, DeMarco knows he's been framed. Locked up in the Alexandria Jail awaiting trial, he calls on his enigmatic friend Emma, an ex-DIA agent, to search for the true killer. Emma's investigation leads her to Sebastian Spear, the ruthless and competitive CEO of the multi-billion-dollar Spear Industries. Spear had a motive for killing Lyle Canton: Canton's wife, Jean, had once been Spear's high school sweetheart and the one true love of his life...--until Canton won her over. Now Jean was dead, killed in a car crash while driving drunk, and Spear blamed Canton for the accident. But the case the F.B.I. has built against DeMarco is airtight, and not a single piece of evidence points to the grieving CEO. Using her cunning and her D.C. connections, Emma sets out to prove that Spear has been using some fixers of his own."--

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Subjects
Genres
Suspense fiction
Political fiction
Detective and mystery fiction
Novels
Published
New York : Atlantic Monthly Press 2019.
Language
English
Main Author
Michael Lawson, 1948- (author)
Edition
First Grove Atlantic edition
Physical Description
325 pages ; 24 cm
ISBN
9780802129307
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

*Starred Review* Another first-rate novel from Lawson, the thirteenth in his celebrated Joe DeMarco series (following House Witness, 2018), with a clever cliff-hanger ending that will both delight and concern his legion of fans. Veteran political fixer DeMarco is framed for the murder of the House Majority Whip, who is found shot dead in his office in the U.S. Capitol. DeMarco's boss, Congressman John Mahoney, does what he can to help, but when substantial evidence leads to DeMarco locked up in the Alexandria, Virginia, jail and fearing for his life, the cavalry rides over the hill in the form of DeMarco's ex-DIA agent friend, known to us only as Emma, who brings all sorts of talent, including ex-commandos and tech hackers, to the search for the true killer. Emma Peel herself has nothing on this woman, but this Emma rips around D.C. at an astonishing pace in an investigation that eventually turns up Russian spies and a ruthless captain of industry determined to avenge the death of the one true love of his life. In an earlier time, the sordid details of government would have been shocking, but not anymore. Lawson takes no prisoners, nonetheless, and this book proves beyond a doubt The Strand Magazine's recent assertion that Lawson's series is the closest thing on the market today to the witty political thrillers of the late, great Ross Thomas.--Jane Murphy Copyright 2018 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Late one Friday night, at the start of Lawson's terrific 11th Joe DeMarco thriller (after 2018's House Witness), a trained killer in a cop uniform slips into the Capitol and shoots House majority whip Lyle Canton dead at his desk. Joe, a staffer who was in the building at the time, is arrested and dragged off to jail in Alexandria, Va. Knowing he's been framed, Joe turns to his former DIA agent friend, Emma, to prove his innocence. All Joe has to do is try to stay alive, but a poisoning attempt lands him in the hospital. Lurking in the background is Joe's boss, House minority leader John Mahoney, who can't help much, because no one is supposed to know that Joe is his bag-man and fixer. While there's no doubt that Emma will prevail, she faces enough difficulties to make the outcome suspenseful. Toward the end, as the midterm elections loom, Joe worries about his job ("You're telling me that my future depends on the Democrats winning about thirty seats in the House?" he asks Mahoney). Readers will hope that the results of the actual 2018 midterms will ensure Joe keeps going. Agent: David Gernert, Gernert Company. (Feb.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Bagman/fixer Joe DeMarco, who has a law degree but has never practiced law, gets to see a whole new side of the legal system when he's expertly framed for murder.DeMarco's minding his own business, working late in his subbasement office in the Capitol, when an assassin shoots House majority whip Lyle Canton, who's also minding his own business in his spiffier office upstairs, to death. The ubiquitous security cameras strewn throughout the building catch little of note. But since DeMarco's patron, House minority leader John Mahoney, has been a frequent target of Canton's attacks, and since the killer sticks around for long enough to plant some highly incriminating evidence in DeMarco's office after he leaves, it's not long before he's arrested. DeMarco, who, incredibly enough, has heretofore spent only a single night in jail despite his checkered career (House Witness, 2018, etc.), can now expect a stay of at least a year while his attorney, Janet Evans, prepares his defense. The most likely way his stay can be shortened lies with billionaire businessman Sebastian Spear, the lover whom the slain politician's wife, Jean Canton, had been on her way to meet when she wrapped her car around a tree. It's pretty obvious to pretty much everyone except the police and the FBI that Spear hired Canton's murderer; now he's trying to reach inside the Alexandria jail and have DeMarco killed, too. So the story quickly settles into a high-stakes groove of thrust and counterthrust: Bill Brayden, Spear Industry's head of security, keeps hatching more and more inventive schemes to get DeMarco's fellow prisoners to kill him; Mahoney and his well-connected allies do everything they can to head off most of these attempts, foil the ones they can't head off, and bring down Brayden, Spear, and the actual killer before they succeed.Lawson's matter-of-fact tone, walking a fine line between satire and reportage, propels his tale forward despite its limited capacity for surprise. And his final sequence, both blackly comic and ineffably sad, provides the perfect conclusion. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

As Emma had no answer to Agent Peyton's question, she asked a question of her own: "Agent Peyton, have you considered the possibility that someone may be trying to frame DeMarco for Canton's murder?" "You know, John Mahoney said the same thing and I'll tell you what I told him. In my twenty-five years in the Bureau, I've never heard of a single person being framed for a crime." "Well, how would you have heard?" Emma said. "If the frame was perfect an innocent man would be sent to jail and no one would ever know." "Yeah, but I've never even heard of a botched frame. Nor can I remember a defense attorney ever making a plausible argument in court that a client was framed. Mistaken identity, yes. Framed, no. People are framed in movies." When Emma didn't immediately respond, Peyton said, "Let me ask you something, Emma. If a smart, rich person like you wanted someone dead, why would you do something as complicated as framing someone for the murder? Killing the guy yourself in some clever way would be simpler. Or if you couldn't do it yourself, why not just hire a sniper to shoot the guy?" "I'll tell you why," Emma said, "and the reason is you." "Me?" Peyton said. "Yes. If the person I wanted to kill was a U.S. congressman I would know that the FBI would assign a man like you to the case, along with a hundred other agents, and you wouldn't give up until you caught me. But if I framed someone and if you caught the person I framed immediately--which you did in the case of DeMarco--then I might get away with the murder because you'd no longer be hunting for me." Excerpted from House Arrest by Mike Lawson All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.