Guilt can be a powerful motivator. After lawyer Jackie Swaitkowski ignores a call from pesky client Sergey Pontecello, who is found dead hours later, she becomes obsessed with determining how the recently-widowed man died. Eventually, her investigation turns up a tangled mess of strange financial transactions, dysfunctional family relationships, a fatal hit-and-run, mysterious body parts, and an extortion plot—not to mention that Jackie herself is threatened with disbarment by various big-wigs who prefer to leave the dirt under the carpet. She’s aided by her best friend, engineer-turned-carpenter Sam Acquillo, and her ex-boyfriend Harry Goodlander, but it’s Jackie, persistent to the point of bull-headedness, who sweeps up the dirt and puts the pieces together. This spin-off features the same vividly evoked Hamptons setting and the same crisp prose, brisk plotting, and sharp dialogue as Knopf’s critically acclaimed Sam Acquillo series, but here center stage switches from ex-boxer and construction worker Acquillo to a resolute first-person female protagonist who was widowed in her 20s but likes living alone just fine. More engaging hard-boiled crime fiction from a rising star. — Booklist
2010
Booklist reviews Knopf’s new series
2010
Kirkus reviews first of new Knopf series
Pot-smoking Jackie Swaitkowski, attorney to sleuthing Southampton carpenter Sam Acquillo (Hard Stop, 2009, etc,), gets a wild, wacky case of her own.
Each unhappy family is unhappy in its own way, but few can rival Sergey Pontecello, his sister-in-law Eunice Wolsonowicz, and her daughter Wendy and adopted son Oscar, aka Fuzzy. His late wife’s sister has taken up residence in his home and won’t budge, Sergey tells Jackie; he wants to evict her. In a subsequent late-night phone call, he complains that Eunice has now locked him out of the master bathroom. Jackie soothes her client only to learn the next day that he’s been found dead, “pretty chewed up,” as Southampton Town cop Joe Sullivan puts it. In one pocket Pontecello is carrying Jackie’s business card, in another a severed nipple that turns out to have been the property of Edna Jackery, a scuba-shop bookkeeper and hit-and-run victim whose body parts have a disconcerting way of escaping the ministrations of family mortician Alden Winthrop III and his son Denny.
Clearly, Watson, these are deep waters, and although no case that kicks off with this kind of a bang can possibly maintain such a sublime level of invention, Knopf does his best to keep his motor-mouthed heroine from stealing the show. All in vain. Manic Jackie may have a law degree and a place in the Hamptons, but she’s still worthy kin to her more downscale Trenton sister Stephanie Plum.
–Kirkus Reviews
2009
PW on new series from Chris Knopf
Lawyer Jackie Swaitkowski, Sam Acquillo’s friend, turns a brief contact with client Sergey Pontecello into a personal crusade in Knopf’s entertaining fifth mystery set in the Hamptons (after 2009’s Hard Stop). Hapless Sergey, whose battered body turns up one night in a Sagaponack street shortly after he retains Jackie, was involved in an unequal battle with his sister-in-law, Eunice Wolsonowicz, over the house he and his wife, Elizabeth, shared until her death. Eunice and Elizabeth’s family tree contains some pretty twisted limbs, and Jackie, who has limited respect for the speed of the law, presses her own investigation even after someone runs her off the road. Readers should be prepared for some shocks as body parts from an old hit-and-run victim occasionally pop up. While Knopf offers a vivid setting, sharp characterizations and devious plotting, Jackie’s starring role doesn’t entirely compensate for the bit part played by Sam, hitherto the series’ lead character. –Publishers Weekly
2009
Mystery Scene on the new Sam Aquillo
Hard Stop (Sam Acquillo Hamptons Mystery)
We leave California for the shores of New York’s Long Island and Chris Knopf’s Hard Stop (Permanent Press $28). The Hamptons are the haunt of retired design engineer Sam Acquillo, whose younger days in the boxing ring have left him with a head injury that could go lethal if re-injured. Brittle skull or not, Acquillo is still a physical guy who loathes walking away from a fight, especially if the other guy throws the first punch. This time out (after The Last Refuge, Two Time
, and Head Wounds
), Acquillo is looking for his ex-boss’s disappeared girlfriend, Iku Kinjo. At fist he simply suspects young Iku simply grew tired of her much-older lover, but when a dead body turns up, Acquillo realizes he’s walked into another case of murder. The plot, which pits defenders of intellectual property rights against predatory financiers, is brisk, but the mainstay of this book is Acquillo himself. As he says, “I used to wake up in the morning feeling a rich blend of panic and hollow despair. Now I’m merely undecided.” This noir-ish series, energized by Acquillo’s sassy one-liners, is one of the finest around. — Mystery Scene, Spring 2009

