The second of Sara Paretsky’s V.I. Warshawski books and the second I’ve read…I’m being systematic. And I’m beginning to worry about Warshawski. In the first book she largely worked on her case for $1, in Deadlock, investigating the death of her cousin Boom Boom, she hopes to get her expenses paid by his estate, but otherwise she is investigating because she thinks it is the right thing to do. Although that’s what private investigators in fiction do, it’s no way to run a business. Warshawski’s cousin has fallen into the lake and drowned; it is put down to an accident, but Warshawki begins to have doubts. We are probably ahead of her, we know we are reading a detective novel and will automictically presume there was murder and when a character searches Boom Boom’s apartment we will presume she is up to something dishonest, although Warshawski accepts her explanations. But fairly quickly Warshawski catches up with us, realises something is eschew and Boom Boom was murdered. There is a big conspiracy in the shipping industry and Warshawski does the normal private detective stuff, questioning people, etc. And there is an attempt on her life, although there is the possibility of it being an accident…although we won’t believe that because we know we are reading a detective novel. I suppose it is standard private detective stuff, a convoluted plot, a lot of possible suspects, but, of course, Warshawski is a woman which changes the dynamics, not least because the men often don’t quite take a woman private investigator seriously. I’m not sure it is a step forward from the first book (and maybe it doesn’t have to be), but it remains fun if you like American private detective novels.