Lew Fonseca, Stuart Kaminski's sad-sack ex-Chicago states attorney office researcher who relocated to Sarasota after the hit and run death of his wife 4 years prior, finally decides to return to his hometown for a 'visit' in "Always Say Goodbye". Lew has always felt the death of his wife, a high powered government attorney, was no accident and on his therapist's advice opts to find out for sure, one way or another. Throughout the course of the novel, he does so, with the help of a variety of friends, relatives, and contacts in the law enforcement and legal worlds. The result is surprising, as is Lew's reaction once he discovers the truth.
A sub-plot involves a rich good ol' boy in Florida to whom Lew, who spends his free time as a process server, once served paper. The rich guy's daughter has been kidnapped, he's unable for various reasons to go to the cops, and he wants Lew to find her and punish the kidnappers. Once Lew returns from Chicago he makes short work of this task, along with his local sidekick Ames McKinney.
Always Say Goodbye did its job in closing off one of the big mysteries of Lew Fonesca's life. Now that he has some certainty around the death of his wife it'll be interesting to see how the series moves forward. Lew's kind of a low-energy guy but his surrounding characters more than make up for that deficiency. As a Chicago area resident, I liked the descriptions of the local neighborhoods, the streets, and the characters he encounters up this way. But c'mon Stuart: everybody knows it's I-57, not I-56, that runs down from Chicago to the U of I. Even a Northwestern guy should know that!