Review by Booklist Review
V. I. Warshawski's twenty-second episode kicks off with the Chicago gumshoe's dogs sniffing out a battered, nearly dead teen wedged between a park's boulders. Vic's follow-up on the girl's recovery raises red flags; the still-unidentified teen inexplicably fled the hospital after a visit from a Chicago PD detective. After CPD's Lieutenant Coney turns violent while interrogating Vic about the girl's whereabouts, Vic becomes certain that Coney's interest goes beyond clearing a missing-persons case. Then the teenage son of Vic's childhood nemesis, Donny Litvak, begs for Vic's help to sort out an extortion threat that's linked to his father's bad-boy past. Before she knows it, Vic is hiding both teens and trying to sort out how they, a crumbling shoreline mansion, and a missing drone prototype have caught the no-holds-barred interest of both cops and the underworld. Interwoven COVID protocols highlight the pandemic's impacts on detecting, but Paretsky's clever plotting and storytelling crusades against corruption remain unchanged in this particularly evocative visit to Vic's world. HIGH-DEMAND BACKSTORY: Paretsky's long-running series has retained its popularity for 40 years, and her latest will do nothing to diminish V. I. Warshawski's enormous fan base.
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
In MWA Grand Master Paretsky's timely, propulsive 21st V.I. Warshawski novel (after 2020's Dead Land), the private investigator's dogs get loose during a walk and lead her to an unconscious teenage girl on Chicago's lakefront. She has no identification, but wakes long enough to whisper the word nagyi before EMTs take her away. The local news interviews Vic about the rescue, and shortly thereafter, two sets of cops--one from Homan Square, the Chicago PD's enhanced interrogation facility--start harassing her for information about Jane Doe and any personal effects Vic may have found at the scene. When the girl later vanishes from the hospital and a possible witness is murdered, Vic resolves to find and protect her from further harm. Subplots involving hate crimes perpetrated against a Jewish Orthodox synagogue and a family of hustlers from Vic's old neighborhood add to this thorny tale of corruption and greed. Paretsky's dizzyingly complex plot strains credulity, but the tale's relentless pacing, sky-high stakes, and strong social justice advocacy should keep readers invested in the expertly crafted characters' fates. Series fans will get their money's worth. Agent: Dominick Abel, Dominick Abel Literary. (May)
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review
V.I. Warshawski returns to confront a list of felonies as long as your arm, even if your arm is holding a rifle. A quiet walk with the dogs she shares with her 92-year-old neighbor, Sal Contreras, turns eventful when one of them slips the leash and takes off to nose out what turns out to be an unconscious young woman, beaten and burned. Thankfully, the Jane Doe, who murmurs only one semi-intelligible word, nagyi, is still alive, but Sgt. Lenora Pizzello, of the Chicago PD, has lots of questions for Vic, beginning with why her dog was unleashed. Thoroughly rattled by the experience, Vic has trouble pivoting to the elderly members of Congregation Shaamar Hashomayim when their synagogue is vandalized. A possible savior to the problems of the impoverished community seems to emerge, but in fact Brendan "Corky" Ranaghan, senior partner in Klondike Financial Services, is merely interested in becoming a silent partner by purchasing their building and doesn't mind throwing out vague threats to help them make up their minds. Back at the hospital from which the Jane Doe has managed to escape wearing the clothes of Ariadne Blanchard, her roommate, Hungarian-born janitor Jan Kadar, who overheard her in conversation with an unidentified visitor, is found murdered, followed shortly by Ariadne. Meantime, Brad (ne Branwell) Litvak, the son of Vic's old friend Donny, has approached her with more halting suspicions, and she runs repeatedly and unprofitably into Lt. Scott Coney, who seems determined to add her to his long list of excessive-force complainants. Paretsky ties this rapidly expanding bolus together with such an assured sense of inevitability that fans may overlook the relative lack of surprise. Not just murder, but adultery, hate crime, fraud, elder abuse, police misconduct, and dysfunctional families. Enjoy. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.