Monday, July 28, 2025

Aubrey Nye Hamilton's Review: Deadly Campaign by Alan Orloff

 

Deadly Campaign by Alan Orloff (Llewellyn Publications, 2012) was published 13 years  ago but the subject might have been ripped out of last week’s headlines. The second book in the Last Laff series, about Channing Hayes and Artie Worsham, co-owners of the Last Laff Comedy Club somewhere in central Fairfax County, Virginia, near Washington, DC, offers insight into the operations of a comedy club, the life of a stand-up comic, and the collusions of a local political campaign. I fear scheming politicos will always be with us.

Channing and Artie have been invited by Thomas Lee, owner of Lee’s Palace, a restaurant next door to Last Laff, to attend a political dinner celebrating Lee’s nephew’s win in the Democratic congressional primary. After a fabulous meal of Chinese cuisine, nominee Edward Wong launched into a polished speech. Shortly after it started, three masked goons dressed in black and carrying baseball bats broke into the room, crushed the video camera, threatened several people including Channing, and smashed the plates, platters, and glassware, then left. After police interviewed the stunned and frightened audience, Hao Wong, Edward’s father, convinced the detectives not to report the crime for fear of damaging Edward’s campaign. Hao was a highly influential member of the Chinese community, many of which were in the room, and he had no trouble pressuring those present to keep the attack to themselves.

The next day Thomas asks Channing to investigate the attack, even though Hao has told him through his wife, Thomas’s sister, to stay out of it. Channing has no real investigative experience but he begins with the obvious, by looking at Edward’s competition to see if the attack was politically motivated. Then he asked enough questions of Edward’s connections to attract the autocratic Hao Wong’s attention, who orders Channing to come to his office and tells him to stop, which of course only annoyed Channing and encouraged him to continue.

In between his bouts of amateur PI work, Channing manages with the daily details of running the comedy club and he develops new material for his own stand-up act which has hit a dry streak. He’s anxious to get his performance mojo back. 

Many threads add to the interest and the plot complexity. The multiple references to places and streets in northern Virginia, my home for 40 years, made the story especially appealing. The ending has a couple of nice twists.

Particularly for readers of political thrillers like Mike Lawson’s Joe DeMarco series and for readers familiar with northern Virginia and its environs, particularly Fairfax County.

Alan Orloff is an Anthony, Agatha, Derringer, and Thriller award winning author. He has published more than fifty short stories in numerous anthologies and periodicals, including Alfred Hitchcock Mystery Magazine, Mystery Weekly, Black Cat Mystery Magazine, and five volumes of the Best New England Crime Stories series. He has served on the editorial selection panel for several anthologies and writing awards, and he is a member of Mystery Writers of America (MWA), International Thriller Writers, and Sisters in Crime. 


·         Publisher: Midnight Ink

·         Publication date: January 8, 2012

·         Language: English

·         Print length: 36 pages

·         ISBN-10: 0738723185

·         ISBN-13: 978-0738723181

 

Amazon Associate Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/4f8KPQm

 

 

Aubrey Nye Hamilton ©2025

 

Aubrey Hamilton is a former librarian who works on Federal It projects by day and reads mysteries at night.

No comments:

Post a Comment