Synopses & Reviews
Dirty-And Deadly-PoliticsBoston attorney Brady Coyne has just received a call from Jimmy D'Ambrosio, a Democratic party kingmaker and acting campaign manager for prosecutor Ellen Stoddard, who's running for a Senate seat. She's got a real shot at becoming the state's first woman to hold the post, except for one thing: her husband Albert, a college professor and Brady's occasional fishing partner, has been acting strangely, and now he's disappeared altogether.
D'Ambrosio wonders if Albert's having a romantic dalliance with a coed, or if some other scandal is threatening to break. Either way, the campaign can't be involved, so he wants Coyne to investigate and keep any threatening skeletons locked firmly away in the closet. But after Coyne uncovers evidence of a murder, D'Ambrosio claims client-attorney privilege and threatens to have him disbarred if he leaks a word of the case to anyone. But Brady refuses to drop the case, and follows the trail to the little town of Southwick, New Hampshire, where an idyllic façade hides a terrible secret. And as the campaign draws to a climax, it seems that Brady Coyne has just been elected most likely to be the next to die.
"Coyne is an old friend to his fans, and he can't drop by often enough with his amiable tales of murder and mayhem."-Booklist
"William G. Tapply is one of the best there is today...a worthy successor to Hammet and both MacDonalds (Ross and John)."-Chicago Tribune
Review
"Coyne is an old friend to his fans, and he can't drop by often enough with his amiable tales of murder and mayhem."
-Booklist "William G. Tapply is one of the best there is today...a worthy successor to Hammet and both MacDonalds (Ross and John)." -Chicago Tribune
"Mystery lovers will thoroughly enjoy Brady and the other characters Tapply creates. They are sharply etched and, together with a deft narrative, make Tapply one of the best in the game." -The Florida Times-Union
"Serious enjoyment." -Library Journal
"Tapply's latest story runs on all cylinders." -Midwest Book Review
Synopsis
Boston attorney Brady Coyne gets caught in the middle of a potential political scandal, when his quest to uncover the truth behind a murder leads him to face the deadly consequences of a decades-old tragedy. Martin's Press.
Synopsis
Boston attorney Brady Coyne has just received a call from Jimmy D'Ambrosio, a Democratic party kingmaker and acting campaign manager for prosecutor Ellen Stoddard, who's running for a Senate seat. She's got a real shot at becoming the state's first woman to hold the post, except for one thing: her husband Albert, a college professor and Brady's occasional fishing partner, has been acting strangely, and now he's disappeared altogether.
D'Ambrosio wonders if Albert's having a romantic dalliance with a coed, or if some other scandal is threatening to break. Either way, the campaign can't be involved, so he wants Coyne to investigate and keep any threatening skeletons locked firmly away in the closet. But after Coyne uncovers evidence of a murder, D'Ambrosio claims client-attorney privilege and threatens to have him disbarred if he leaks a word of the case to anyone. But Brady refuses to drop the case, and follows the trail to the little town of Southwick, New Hampshire, where an idyllic façade hides a terrible secret. And as the campaign draws to a climax, it seems that Brady Coyne has just been elected most likely to be the next to die.
About the Author
William G. Tapply is a contributing editor to
Field & Stream. He is the author of numerous books on fishing and wildlife as well as more than twenty books of crime fiction, most recently
A Fine Line. He lives in Hancock, New Hampshire.