From Publishers Weekly
It is hard to imagine a more perfect rendering of people and place than Campbell delivers in the voice of his unlikely hero, Chicago sewer inspector and Democratic committeeman Jimmy Flannery. In this 11th outing (after The Lion's Share, 1996), Jimmy describes his elevation to alderman-in-waiting. He's honored but worried, and with good reason. Jimmy helped send Leo Lundatos, a long-serving congressman, to the federal pokey, but the still-powerful Lundatos is unaccountably ready to support him. More troubling, Jimmy (whose wife, Mary, is pregnant with their second child) feels stirrings for Leo's ambitious wife, Maggie, who has a power base and mysterious plans of her own. Meanwhile, a teacher friend asks Jimmy's help in fighting off a book-banning activist against whom the ward leader has faced off before. The politics turn poisonous when a bullet narrowly misses Jimmy and kills his campaign aide, a transsexual former cop named Mabel (nee Milton) Halstead. Jimmy struggles to identify the killer and run a campaign without jeopardizing political and personal alliances. It takes a coldhearted reader not to be charmed by this Irish pol. In this first-person narration, Jimmy mangles the language just right; it's no wonder his night-school English teacher loves him.
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Booklist
In this eleventh installment in the popular series about Chicago pol Jimmy Flannery, the party leaders have let him know, in their own wonderfully arcane way, that he's being anointed as committeeman for the mayor's ward. Since that job will be a springboard to the city council, new friends and old enemies begin to spring up everywhere he turns. One of his new friends is rich, connected, and sexy Maggie Lundatos, the soon-to-be-ex wife of a crooked congressman who's doing time at Club Fed, but Jimmy is unnerved by what she might want in return for her support. In need of trusted advisors, he turns to a lesbian, a socialist, and a former cop who has gone from Milton to Mabel--hardly a traditional campaign team in a neighborhood like Hizzoner's Bridgeport. When Mabel is killed while saving Jimmy from a drive-by shooting and he finds himself battling book banners, Jimmy once again has to balance his principles against his political instincts. As always, fine entertainment from the reliable Campbell.
Thomas Gaughan