Outstanding book, not only in the series, but also in the genre. Previous books have included more humor, poking fun at characters, places, etc., and have also generally mainly focused on two or three of Butch's family members. This one, however, involves every family member and several colleagues and friends, old and new, in a darker and much more somber story line.
Marlene has left her bodyguard work in NYC and has purchased a farm away from the city where she is breeding and training mastiffs as guard dogs. Butch is still the chief assistant district attorney for Manhattan and is quickly becoming "burned out" chasing corrupt politicians. Marlene becomes friendly with her neighbor and young daughter, and when these neighbors return to their home in West Virginia where her husband is involved in coal mining union politics and are subsequently murdered, Marlene receives a frantic phone call from one of the surviving sons begging her assistance in solving the tragedy. Butch is also sent there to resolve the massive corruption in the union. Eventually the whole family ends up in the hills of West VA, and one disaster follows another. By the end of the book, Butch's whole family is coming apart at the seams, and there is no guarantee that they will all survive to return to their old "normal" lives.