The Didius Falco mysteries are amusing entertainments, and though I'm more than two decades behind their publication dates at this point, is a series I expect to read to completion. The first book, Silver Pigs, is a comic classic.
This volume feels closer to the tone of the first volume than had been true in the previous couple of volumes, with more humorous moments sprinkled in among the ghastly crimes. Falco is back in Rome, and his old legionary friend Petronius Longus is leading an investigation for the vigiles. He has finally gotten a conviction against one of the major criminal figures in the city, and that will lead to a shakeup of the criminal underworld, once that man is exiled.
More important, though, is that Falco needs to find a better apartment. And better relatives. And, maybe, to convince Vespasian to actually pay him.
And yes, I've already got ten more volumes on my unread shelf, so I will be reading on. (Despite, it must be deplored, the three grimaces.)