Ebook309 pages4 hours
Family Business: A Lydia Chin/Bill Smith Mystery
By S.J. Rozan
Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars
4.5/5
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About this ebook
The death of a powerful Chinatown crime boss thrusts private eye Lydia Chin and her partner Bill Smith into a world of double-dealing, subterfuge, murder, and—because this is New York City—real estate in this new mystery by Edgar Award-winning novelist S. J. Rozan.
The death of Chinatown’s most powerful mogul, a powerful Chinatown crime boss, thrusts private eye Lydia Chin and her partner Bill Smith into a world of double-dealing, murder, and real estate scandal in this new mystery by the award winning novelist S. J. Rozan.
Choi has left the Tong headquarters building to his niece, who hires Lydia and her partner, Bill Smith, to accompany her to inspect it. The building is at the center of a tug-of-war between Chinatown preservation interests—including Lydia's brother Tim—and a real estate developer who's desperate to get his hands on it.
When Lydia, Bill, and Choi's niece go to the building, they discover the Tong members are equally divided on the question of whether the niece should hold onto the building, or sell it—and make them rich. Entering Choi's private living quarters they find the murdered body of Choi's chief lieutenant.
The battle for the building has begun. Can Lydia and Bill escape being caught in the crossfire?
The death of Chinatown’s most powerful mogul, a powerful Chinatown crime boss, thrusts private eye Lydia Chin and her partner Bill Smith into a world of double-dealing, murder, and real estate scandal in this new mystery by the award winning novelist S. J. Rozan.
Choi has left the Tong headquarters building to his niece, who hires Lydia and her partner, Bill Smith, to accompany her to inspect it. The building is at the center of a tug-of-war between Chinatown preservation interests—including Lydia's brother Tim—and a real estate developer who's desperate to get his hands on it.
When Lydia, Bill, and Choi's niece go to the building, they discover the Tong members are equally divided on the question of whether the niece should hold onto the building, or sell it—and make them rich. Entering Choi's private living quarters they find the murdered body of Choi's chief lieutenant.
The battle for the building has begun. Can Lydia and Bill escape being caught in the crossfire?
Author
S.J. Rozan
SJ Rozan is the author of 16 novels and 75+ short stories. Her work has won the Edgar, Anthony, Shamus, Nero, and Macavity Arads and the Japanese Maltese Falcon Award. In 2016 she was given the Private Eye Writers of America Life Achievement Award. She has served on the National Boards of MWA and Sisters in Crime and as President of PWA. She edited BRONX NOIR, an NAIBA Notable Book of the Year, and co-edited Dark End of the Street.
Read more from S.J. Rozan
The Mayors of New York: A Lydia Chin/Bill Smith Mystery Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The Art of Violence: A Lydia Chin/Bill Smith Novel Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsNew Jersey Noir Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Paper Son: A Lydia Chin/Bill Smith Novel Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5
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Reviews for Family Business
Rating: 4.342105315789474 out of 5 stars
4.5/5
19 ratings3 reviews
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Family Business is the latest mystery novel in Rozan's long-running series featuring New York private eye Lydia Chin and her fellow P.I. boyfriend Bill Smith. Here, Lydia and Bill get pulled in to solve the mystery of a murdered Tong leader found dead in a Chinatown building at the center of a real estate development battle. There’s plenty of action, some light humor, and enough complexity to keep your attention right to the end.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5This originally appeared at The Irresponsible Reader.--- “Big Brother Choi died." “Wow. What happened?” “Massive heart attack. Not to worry, there.” I hadn't really been worried. It wasn’t likely Big Brother Choi had been rubbed out by a rival tong leader and a Chinatown tong war was about to start. Those ham-handed days were largely gone. But Mary’s “there” implied something else, and I knew what it was, the reason Chris Chiang had called. A seismic shudder was about to move through the streets we'd grown up on. Our high school physics prof had told us that nature abhors a vacuum. So does power.WHAT'S FAMILY BUSINESS ABOUT?The core of this novel is focused on what's going to happen to a real estate development in Chinatown. Which really doesn't sound that exciting—but Rozan's able to make you care. Also, this is not a run-of-the-mill real estate problem.There's a large-scale development headed towards Lydia's neighborhood, whether anyone wants it or not. The only thing stopping it is that the owner of one building in the middle of the projected development refuses to sell. That owner is—er, was—Big Brother Choi, the head of a tong, who uses that building as his tong's HQ.So, yeah, a criminal enterprise is all that stands between a (seemingly) legal and successful businessman and the destruction of a neighborhood/way of life. And then the head of the tong dies (of natural causes), and everything could change.Choi's niece—the executor of his will—comes to Lydia and Bill to provide some security for her as she tries to exert her position vis-à-vis the building. A lot is riding on this one building, and everyone has an opinion: there are two factions within the tong vying to determine the future of the building (and, with it, the tong); the developer; and the neighborhood's historical society--and it's all up to her to decide. People on all sides of the issue are trying to pressure her into making a decision they'd prefer about the building--and some of the pressure could be pretty intimidating.Especially when ranking members of the tong start dying—without natural causes like those that took out Choi. And then people start shooting at people tangentially connected to the niece and threatening them.Lydia and Bill now have to keep the niece alive and unscathed while trying to discover who's behind the shooting and the dead tong members.THE LYDIA AND BILL RELATIONSHIPThere are several reasons that Lydia and Bill's romantic relationship is one of my favorites in fiction, and I'm not going to try to enumerate them all. But probably my favorite part is that when they shifted from close friends/business associates to romantic partners the rest stayed pretty much the same. They deepened what was there, but didn't radically change it.Their flirting is a little more obvious—and Lydia's less likely to cut it off. But they still have each other's back, the mutual support and trust are still there. When they're on the job, they're on the job, not making goo-goo eyes at each other. Bill knows that Lydia is going to be reckless—and he doesn't try to stop her any more than he did before, but he sure worries about her. Would that everyone in fiction who made that transition did so as well.SO, WHAT DID I THINK ABOUT FAMILY BUSINESS?As I've mentioned before (likely too often), while I think most of the Bill-narrated novels are technically superior, the Lydia-narrated novels are consistently the more entertaining. So I went into this with high expectations—and they were pretty much met.I could go on about the flirting between Lydia and Bill, or talk about Lydia's wit and narration, or how nice it was to see a minor character from several books ago show up. But that's probably enough to indicate where I'm leaning with this post. There are a couple of points that I want to talk about a little, however.I loved the way Lydia's mom inserted herself into the investigation. I've said enough about the slow-burn in getting the romance to advance, but getting Lydia's mother to stop actively disapproving of Lydia's career and now getting involved?? I dare you to go back 13 books and try to predict that.Like most people who read Detective Fiction, one of my great joys is being one or three steps ahead of the protagonist in putting the clues together. THere's something so satisfying about being more clever than they are—and in getting your guess endorsed by the protagonist. But what's better? Having the protagonist put all the pieces together in a way you didn't see coming—and instantly realizing there was no other way to interpret the evidence. That mix of "X was really clever there" and "ugh, I'm such a dunce for not seeing that" is somehow gratifying. For me, at least, the solutionStill, I'm not sure the people that Lydia initially revealed the solution to were the best to hear that. I'm even less sure of her timing on the revelation. But it did lead to some of the more exciting parts of the book—so as a reader, I liked that. I just wish that Lydia would be more judicious at times.This was my first novel of the year—it's a pretty good way to start 2022, something as entertaining as this was can make a guy optimistic about the next twelve months. That's probably a silly way to think about things, but I'm running with it.Family Business is not only another strong entry in the series that will please fans, it like almost all those before) would be a good entry point for someone curious about the series. So really, there's no excuse to not pick it up. Go do so.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5I hadn't read any of these for a few years, so have missed the developing relationship between Bill and Lydia, but really enjoyed this. Learning about some Chinese customs is fascinating for those of us who aren't familiar with them and these insights are woven into the story well. It is more difficult to keep track of people when referred to by their Chinese names, but we all got through Crime and Punishment OK, so we can do it. I also like the way the characters are attuned to each other (or not) -- the relationships are real.
Book preview
Family Business - S.J. Rozan
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