From Kirkus Reviews:
Immensely amusing debut suspenser by Rudman, an assistant district attorney in the New York District Attorney's office, who teams up with old-hand screenwriter/novelist Dennis (Somebody Just Grabbed Annie, 1975, etc.) to give readers the lowdown on Manhattan's Assets and Forfeiture Division, for which Rudman works. Assets and Forfeiture picks up property owned by criminals and reinvests it into policing the city. Attorney Susan Given's catch phrase is ``Crime Never Sleeps'' as she goes about relieving criminals of their goods. Along the way, Susan is trying to divorce her stupefyingly blinkered psychiatrist husband, Hugh Carver, with whom she shares custody of her two daughters, 14-year-old Salvadoran-born adopted Polly and 10-year-old Ivy, a vaudeville team of wisemouths about parents and parenting. Susan's biggest case at the moment is an attempt to bring charges against Nick Tesla and his son Junior, who have sewn up the garbage-carting business in Manhattan for the past 40 years. When an Oklahoma carting company tries to move into town and undercut Tesla's vastly overcharging group of thugs and legbreakers, Junior Tesla batters the brains out of a trucker. Manolo, a Cuban accompanying him at the time, chooses to run off rather than be involved in the murder. In a very funny scene, Susan captures him in a hotel bedroom and has him secreted away in a witness protection program--except that Manolo has fallen in love with Susan and leaves the program to chase after her. Meanwhile, Michael--novelist, actor, and her lover from Los Angeles--shows up, woos Polly and Ivy, and helps Susan with her undercover work against the Teslas, who continue devising ways to destroy their nemesis, although by now bodybuilder Junior has himself fallen for her. This kickoff in a series barrels along on a gift for witty dialogue that already sounds like a top tv crime show. Great entertainment. -- Copyright ©1997, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.
From Library Journal:
Meet Susan Given, single mother and head of the Manhattan District Attorney's Asset Forfeiture Unit. Her job: to seize criminals' assets. Her current assignment: to bust the Mafia garbage cartel's stranglehold on the New York cartage business. Her problems: some vile mob thugs; a petty, jealous boss; and a wacko husband who refuses to give her a divorce. Her fate: ah, therein lies the tale. Written in tandem by a novelist and an actual DA, this thriller is reminiscent of the hard-boiled novels of Raymond Chandler and Cornell Woolrich where atmosphere takes precedence over plot and clever repartee replaces character development. But it's a thoroughly enjoyable read with a satisfying ending, and Susan Given would be welcome to make another appearance?if the authors can reduce the constant stream of one-liners so that she doesn't sound like "Kinsey Millhone at the Improv." Recommended.
-?Rebecca House Stankowski, Purdue Univ. Calumet Lib., Hammond, Ind.
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.
"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.