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Charm City

Laura Lippman

Plot Summary

Charm City

Laura Lippman

Fiction | Novel | Adult | Published in 1997

Plot Summary
Charm City (1997) is a mystery novel by New York Times bestselling author Laura Lippman. The novel is the second in Lippman’s Tess Monaghan Series, following Baltimore Blues (1997). Tess Monaghan is close to getting her private investigator’s license when an old friend and fellow journalist calls on Tess to investigate who ran an inflammatory article about one of Baltimore’s wealthy businessmen in the Baltimore Beacon Light (Blight). A former reporter, Tess knows Baltimore and the newspaper industry inside out. She soon discovers that secrets abound at the Blight and a character assassination becomes an inquiry into a real murder. Charm City won both the Shamus Award for Best PI Paperback Original and the Edgar Award for Best Paperback Original in 1998.

Tess Monaghan is tall, wears her hair in a long braid, enjoys rowing when it’s not bitterly cold outside, and is noticeably sensitive about her approaching 30th birthday. When the Star, the newspaper she used to work for, folded, Tess took a job running investigations for the lawyer Tyner Gray. Now, Tess is on the verge of becoming an official PI. She lives in an apartment above her Aunt Kitty’s bookstore. Tess’s boyfriend of five months, Crow, works as a clerk in the store. Crow is a lanky, 23-year-old musician who loves Tess and presses her for commitment. Tess, however, doesn’t want commitment. She worries that the age difference between the two of them is too great, and she doesn’t think she loves Crow. Her relationship “rules of disengagement” include no joint purchases and no shared anything—including no moving in together.

Tess witnesses a promo event led by the successful local businessman, Gerard “Wink” Wynkowski. With the approval of the governor and mayor, Wink is negotiating to entice a pro-basketball team to come to Baltimore. A Cinderella story, Wink spent his childhood committing petty crimes but turned his life around and grew rich and famous. Tess sees her old friend, the reporter Kevin Feeney, covering the event, along with newbie newshound Rosita Ruiz. Feeney hints at a bombshell of a story they’re about to break. He suggests that Wink’s finances are a house of cards and alludes to allegations of domestic abuse against Wink. Unfortunately for Feeney, the Blight’s editorial staff eighty-sixes his expose, citing a lack of evidence and too many anonymous sources. But the article appears in the paper anyway, and Wink is later found dead, apparently a victim of suicide.



Whitney Talbot, Tess’s old college friend and a pundit for the Blight recommends that Tess investigate who hacked into the newspaper’s computer and planted the article about Wink. Tess talks to the resident computer geek and a string of egotistical employees. She meets and falls for the charming, boyish, muscular editor, Jack Sterling. Tess breaks up with Crow, unable to meet his level of commitment. Tess thinks that since she initiated the breakup, she should feel “exhilarated” and free, but instead, she feels sad.

Tess has another mystery to solve. Someone beats her Uncle Spike and leaves him for dead during an apparent robbery of Spike’s tavern, The Point. Spike lies in a coma, and Tess is left caring for a sad-looking retired greyhound named Esskay. Tess is not an animal person and knows little about rehabilitating former racing dogs. But as time goes by, she comes to care for Esskay. Tess discovers a hidden bag of ears, cut from dead greyhounds, and wonders what Spike was involved in. Shady characters follow Tess and kidnap both her and Esskay, but they escape.

Tess discovers that Rosita Ruiz had a bad reputation at her old Texas newspaper for illegally paying her sources and fabricating information. The Blight fires Rosita, despite her insistence that she has information that Wink’s death was not a suicide. Tess follows up on Rosita’s claim and discovers that much of the inflammatory story about Wink was incorrect: Wink did not beat his wife but was instead abused by her, and Wink didn’t kill a shop owner during one of his youthful robberies, his teenage partner in crime was the killer. Tess visits Rosita’s apartment and discovers Rosita dead at the bottom of her balcony. More investigation reveals that Rosita was operating under a false identity. Tess is convinced Rosita was killed because of information she knew about Wink’s death.



Tess drives with Sterling to meet Paul Tucci, an aging athlete with shady but powerful family connections who is Tess’s prime suspect. Sterling turns the tables on Tess, revealing that he murdered Wink and that Rosita fell from her balcony when she tried to blackmail him. Sterling is the man who committed the robbery long ago with Wink and killed the shop owner. Sterling beats and kicks Tess and plans to shoot her, but Feeney and Whitney arrive just in time. Whitney shoots Sterling.

Spike recovers and explains to Tess that he found video evidence of an illegal hunting ring. People would pay to hunt and shoot retired greyhounds. The dead dogs’ ears were sliced off, eliminating their identifying tattoos. Paul Tucci is one of the hunters on the video. Tess gives the evidence to the Blight to expose the ring, and Feeney gets the story. Tess is happy when Spike lets her keep Esskay. They discover that another reporter, Colleen Reganhart, was guilty of running the original expose on Wink: She did it to boost ratings and give Rosita a leg up. Whitney quits the paper to travel to Tokyo. Tess goes to see Crow play a concert, but he acts like a stranger. He announces he is moving to Austin with the band. She tells Crow that she made a mistake, and he simply agrees. Tess realizes too late that she did love him.

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