Wednesday, October 06, 2010

First Wednesday Book Review Club



STRANGLEHOLD, Ed Gorman

A few years ago, I read Ed Gorman's first book in the Dev Conrad series (SLEEPING DOGS) and asked him if he planned on writing another one. He said he was mulling it over. It felt like a perfect fit for Ed then and the second book just solidifies that feeling. Ed knows the world of political campaigns well and his portrait of it is completely convincing.

Dev is a political consultant, called in by campaigns to straighten out messes more often than not. Not as a "cleaner" or anything sinister, but more to give advice, succor, and to straighten out the kind of trouble a life in politics seems to encourage. Dev is a guy easy to spend time with. He reminds me of Jim Rockford or Travis McGee.

This time his client is a Congresswoman who's acting strangely and worrying her family and staff in the midst of a campaign. She's disappearing for hours at a time. Much of her support comes from her wealthy stepmother who doesn't like the behavior she's witnessing and is used to calling the shots. The candidate had a troubled youth and there's worry she's returned to her errant ways.

Dev follows the trail to some nasty adversaries and into the Congresswoman's back story, which is an interesting one. As I said, Ed Gorman knows politics and every note is pitch perfect here.

What I love about Ed's books are three-fold. He is a great instructor (for anyone learning to write) in the art of moving a plot along without any lag time. At the same time, he is able to work in little asides: humor, cynicism (and who over fifty doesn't have that) and his knowledge about how politics work--all without even seeming didactic or dull. Thirdly, and I have said this before, Ed likes women. He writes about them well; his protagonist treats them well. Do you know how rare this is lately?

If I was in trouble, Dev Conrad (or Ed Gorman) would be the first one I sought out. Look for this book: Stranglehold. The time is right for a look at politics through Ed Gorman's eyes. His vision is clear.

For more reviews, please visit Barrie Summy right here.

13 comments:

Cullen Gallagher said...

I completely agree, Patti. One of Gorman's best. I read both Dev novels back to back, and I felt like I had a new friend when I finished. Eagerly awaiting a third novel with Dev.

Charles Gramlich said...

always love a good Gorman, although I haven't read this one. The connection you make about Travis McGee certainly makes me want to.

Sarah Laurence said...

Great review - you make me want to read a book outside my normal genres.

Anonymous said...

Patti - Thanks so much for this review :-). I have to agree with Charles: you make a fascinating connection to McGee here.

Anonymous said...

"He's mulling it over" - love that line. Sometimes that's how I feel - just taking it one book at a time.

Anonymous said...

I have the first one on the shelf waiting to be read after seeing a couple of good reviews.

My favorite of his writing remains his great short stories.

Jeff M.

pattinase (abbott) said...

He can really do it all, can't he?
BTW, Jeff. Someone got our credit card number in NY and charged things at Victoria's Secret and Nordstrom. Probably got it at the hotel itself. Luckily, they ordered online which the credit card company picked up on. So you aren't safe anywhere.

Gary Dobbs/Jack Martin said...

I've got to find this one - sounds just my thing.

George said...

I'll have to seek out a copy of this. Jeff's right about Gorman's talent at short stories.

Anonymous said...

Bummer, Patti. It happened to us a few years ago in New Orleans and by the time we found out we had a month of crap to deal with. Some viciious SOB signed us up for various book and record and wine and cigar clubs but didn't actually order anything for himself, so WTF?

We had to ship stuff back all over the country but most companies we called were really nice about it (with one exception - a "vitamin" company in North Dakota who took us to small claims court but ended up investigated themselves).

Jeff M.

Linda McLaughlin said...

Ooh, I love political novels. Thanks for the recommendation.

Barrie said...

Great review. As usual. And this book sounds like a winner. :)

Mathew Paust said...

Humdingers--book and review! ;)