
But then hardly anybody's a nice guy here. The candidate's no prize, herself, and the man who's holding onto the MacGuffin decides he'd rather cash in than help out. Gorman has several surprises in store, and at the end there aren't really any winners, much less the voters.
Gorman's writing and political observations are sharp and calculated to sting, no matter which side of the political aisle you prefer, but as usual in Gorman's work, no matter how flawed the characters are, they're treated with humanity and compassion. Okay, not all of them. Some of them are just too undeserving. But most of them. This is a fine book in a fine series. Check it out.
2 comments:
I read the first one in this series and enjoyed it but I just never got around to the second book.
Ed is one of the best, and nobody tops him in weaving political themes into tough mysteries.
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