From Publishers Weekly
Harlem landlord Amos Brown is back in Singer's follow-up to A Landlord's Tale. It's Christmastime, 1980 and Brown is trying to protect his corner of Harlem while the crack epidemic takes hold an as-yet-unnamed disease cuts down the city's gay population and a loon guns down John Lennon. While raising funds at a poker game, Brown gets a call to bail out his mentor Deacon Steadwell, in jail for the stabbing death of a pimp. Steadwell may be a career thief, but Brown knows he's no murderer. While attempting to exonerate Steadwell, Brown uncovers a plot that ties together stolen furs with stolen diamonds, a prominent Harlem brothel and the Russian mafia. Singer paints a vivid and gritty picture of vintage Harlem: there are neither angels nor saints and appearances are usually deceiving. In the end, this is a convincing love story about Brown's neighborhood. Readers of urban fiction will appreciate the snappy pacing and compromised characters.
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From Booklist
Amos Brown, an ex-con turned landlord, is entangled in the eccentricities of his tenants, friends, and foes. He gets involved in a scandal when Steadwell, a mentor from his days in the streets, interrupts a poker game. Steadwell calls from jail, hysterical because he has been framed for the murder of Dap Jones, a local thief. Amos is determined to help his friend and calls on Prince, a lawyer who owes him a favor. His gay tenant and neighbor, Wilbur, has been guardian to sickly, six-year-old Josephine since her mother, Patty, abandoned her while strung out on drugs. When Patty returns, threatening to take back her daughter, Amos becomes vested in Josephine's well--being. His former lover, Catherine, is the niece of a powerful Harlem gangster named Harry. At Harry's funeral, his chief lieutenant, Basil, is recognized as the heir apparent to his enterprise. Amos masterfully handles everyone's situation, and Singer leaves us wanting to know more.
Lillian LewisCopyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved