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It’s the challenge that every author ultimately faces: How do you take something that’s already weird enough in real life and translate it to the silver screen or the printed page?
Now imagine that something is Massachusetts politics, which can be, to put it mildly, transcendentally, existentially weird.
That’s the challenge that confronted veteran journalist and author Mike Lupica as he once again assumed the voice and mantle of Spenser, Boston’s most famous — and fictional — private investigator.
The result is “Hot Property‚” out Nov. 26 from G.P. Putnam’s Sons. The book blends drama on Beacon Hill and City Hall Plaza with a disturbing and very personal act of violence that hits Spenser and his usual supporting cast of Hawk, Susan Silverman and Martin Quirk very close to home.
It’s the 52nd book in the series, originated by the late Robert B. Parker, a Boston mainstay, who died in 2010, and continued by author Ace Atkins before Lupica took up author duties with last year’s “Broken Trust.”
Lupica recently took a few minutes to chat with MassLive about the new book, his love for Boston and what’s next for Spenser.
This conversation has been lightly edited for clarity, content, and potential spoilers. But if you’re a hardcore Spenser fan, now might be a good time to go get a snack or something …
Q: Massachusetts politics is front and center in this new book. What was your crash course like for it?
Lupica: “I’ve spent an amazing amount of time [in Boston]. I grew up in Nashua, New Hampshire. I went to Boston College. My four kids all went to Boston College. I started out writing, working nights at The [Boston] Globe and writing for the Boston Phoenix and Boston Magazine. I spent a fair amount of my life in Boston. So I followed the various political shenanigans.”
“I know that casinos are now at play in Boston. So I did some reading on that. And then I found out about this, you know, this incredible piece of land [in South Boston]. And so I decided to make that, as Hitchcock would say, the MacGuffin of this book.”
“Originally, my idea was to write about a George Santos-like politician, which I ended up doing, except I wanted to make this more personal.”
Q: That character, Nick Drummond, who’s the Santos figure serving in the Massachusetts state Senate, was he a composite of existing Massachusetts politicians? Or was he drawn entirely from your imagination?
Lupica: “George Santos was never charming, okay? I mean, he was a grifter, and everybody kind of saw him as a grifter. And it took everybody a while to get him out of Congress. But I wanted to have George Santos be this popular, charming, handsome boy wonder of Massachusetts politics.”
“And he turned out to be [one of the main character’s] boyfriend, and he died under mysterious circumstances. And in a lot of ways, you know, a dead guy becomes one of the central figures of this book as we keep unpacking things that we find out about [him].”
Q: The main tragedy of the book draws the characters together, Spenser, Hawk, Capt. Martin Quirk, even [Spenser’s partner] Susan Silverman. It feels like a family drama in a lot of ways.
Lupica: “This is a family drama. And the fun thing was having even Susan Silverman soften her position to the victim of this shooting.”
“But you know … here’s another thing I love about these characters and why they were so brilliantly originated in the imagination of Mr. Parker … There’s a humanity to all of them. Obviously, there’s a humanity to Spenser and Hawk, and their relationship, and Susan, and we see a softer side of [lawyer Rita Fiore]. And because I wrote the [Parkerverse] Jesse Stone novels, I was like a manager going out in the fifth inning, tapping my right arm and bringing Jesse in. And, so, for the first time, really, we have the Three Musketeers: Spenser and Hawk and Jesse.”
Q: In the books, you can see the streets that Spenser is walking. And if you live here, you know how he got from Point A to Point B. Have you ever had a Bostonian fact-check you, and tell you that [Spenser] couldn’t possibly have gotten to someplace from where he was before?
Lupica: “I’m completely confident, especially in the Back Bay, because I spent [time there]. I love writing about The Street Bar [in the Newbury Hotel] because I spent a lot of my life in it. Because we were either at Red Sox … or Celtics games; or … in my sports columnist life, I had so much reason to go to Boston … This city is in my heart and in my mind.”
Q: What’s on tap for you next in Parker-land?
Lupica: There’s a new [Spenser book] … All I will tell you is that it will deal with a Joe Rogan-type and immigration.”
Dr. Kevin Hassett, a Massachusetts native, has been tapped to serve as the Trump administration’s National Economic Council. (Photo via the Executive Office of the President of the United States)Executive Office of the President of the United States
Greenfield native Kevin A. Hassett is in line for a White House return in the incoming Trump administration.
President-elect Donald Trump tapped Hassett, now a fellow at Stanford University’s Hoover Institution, to serve as director of the National Economic Council.
Hassett served as chair of the Council of Economic Advisers from 2017 to 2019. In 2020, he rejoined the Trump White House as a senior advisor, the Trump transition team announced last week.
During that first tour of duty, Hassett was an architect of the 2017 tax cuts that Trump has vowed to extend when he returns to the White House early next year.
Hassett “will play an important role in helping American families recover from the Inflation that was unleashed by the Biden Administration,” Trump said in a statement.
“Together, we will renew and improve our record Tax Cuts, and ensure that we have Fair Trade with Countries that have taken advantage of the United States in the past,” Trump continued. “Kevin will also play a key role [in] strengthening our Economic relationships with Allies, new and old, while also securing Prosperity for the American People.”
(MassLive file)Patti Sapone | NJ Advance Media
The Nov. 5 election is barely in the books, and politicos in the 6th Essex House District already find themselves contemplating a special election.
That comes courtesy of Gov. Maura Healey, who nominated Rep. Jerry Parisella of Beverly to a District Court judgeship, according to State House News Service.
Parisella, who’s been in the House since 2011, chairs the Economic Development and Emerging Technologies Committee. He was one of the lead negotiators on the $4 billion economic development package that Healey recently signed into law.
Parisella is Healey’s 50th judicial nomination since taking office in 2023, the wire service reported.
“As a member of the Legislature for more than a decade and a U.S. Army veteran, Representative Parisella is a true public servant who knows what it means to deliver for the people of Massachusetts,” the Democratic governor said in a statement. “We believe that he has the knowledge, the compassion and the experience to excel on the District Court. We’re excited for him to continue his service to the state, and we look forward to working with [the] Governor’s Council as they consider his nomination.”
Pinnacle Bogs in Plymouth will benefit from a $740,000 restoration grant from the Healey administration. (Photo via Office of Gov. Maura Healey)Healey administration photo
$6 million: The total state funding that’s headed to cranberry bogs and coastal wetlands across the state thanks to an infusion of cash from the Healey administration.
The money channeled through the state Department of Fish and Game’s Division of Ecological Restoration, will help preserve and restore cranberry bogs in 12 communities, the administration said in a statement last week.
Also:
$740,000: The portion of that money that’s headed to Pinnacle Bogs in Plymouth.
$300,000: The portion of the money that’s headed for the Frost Fish Creek Wetland in Chatham; the Jack’s Marsh Wetland, and the Agawam River Bog, both overseen by the Buzzard’s Bay Coalition.
“Ecological restoration is essential for meeting Massachusetts’ environmental and climate adaptation goals, but it takes local leadership to take the steps needed toward making this work possible,” Beth Lambert, director of the Division of Ecological Restoration, said.
The State House on Beacon Hill in Boston. (State House News Service photo)State House News Service
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Attorney General Andrea Campbell speaks at a celebration of the success of the MBTA Communities Act in Somerville. (Tréa Lavery/MassLive)Tréa Lavery/MassLive
“Our workplace laws exist to provide crucial rights and protections to our workforce. My office will continue to enforce these laws to protect and empower workers, including young workers who contribute to their communities and gain new skills and experiences.”
— Massachusetts Attorney General Andrea J. Campbell grills Northeast Foods LLC, which operates dozens of Burger King franchise locations across the state, for its child labor law violations.
This one popped up on my commute on the Red Line the other morning. It’s Velvet Crush’s cover of “Why Not Your Baby,” first recorded by Dillard and Clark. This version comes from Velvet Crush’s essential 1994 LP “Teenage Symphonies to God.” Some readers may recall the band toured around New England quite a lot in those days.
This year marks the 40th anniversary of “Do They Know It’s Christmas,” the holiday charity single by the British pop supergroup collectively known as Band Aid. The record and the later Live Aid concert raised millions of dollars for Ethiopian famine relief and put the African nation on the world map.
So how did the Ethiopians feel about it? Well … it’s a bit of a mixed bag. “Everyone was happy, but it became annoying,” The Guardian reports in its look back.
That’s it for this morning. I’ll be off next week. So we’ll see you back here in a bit. As always, send tips, comments and suggestions to jmicek@masslive.com.
Books
Massachusetts General Hospital nurse-turned-author Karen Winn often writes in the Boston Athenaeum, watching tours pass by.
One day, in 2023, she joined one. And the seed for her next novel was planted.
“We passed by an oil portrait of Thomas Handasyd Perkins, a major benefactor to the Athenaeum in the 1800s. The docent alluded to this dark history as to how he’d amassed a large portion of his fortune in the opium trade,” she tells me.
“The tour group moved on — but I was stuck there thinking. I went home and fell down this rabbit-hole of research and learned, to my surprise, just how many of the Boston Brahman families made their fortune in the opium trade. It was fascinating.”
I went down a similar rabbit-hole. The Boston Brahmin opium fortunes are well-documented, including a past Harvard Art Museum exhibit, articles, books and website info including, speaking of Perkins, the Perkins School for the Blind.
Winn, who lives on Beacon Hill and was in a secret society (I asked) added bits and pieces from her own life into the novel-creating mixing bowl: What if there was a secret society built on old opium money in Beacon Hill, and a Mass General nurse was somehow involved?
“The Society” was born.
If you’re looking for a Boston-set page-turner — an “alternate universe Beacon Hill,” as Winn puts it — to kick off your summer reading, add this suspense to your beach bag.
Nutshell: The Knox, standing proudly on Mount Vernon Street in Beacon Hill, houses meetings of a secret society. Some in Boston believe it’s an elite social club — others believe it hides something sinister.
When Boston antique dealer Vivian Lawrence sees her family fortune vanish, she turns to a family legend that ties her to the Knox, seeking a way into the exclusive secret society.
Taylor Adams, a 20-something Mass General ER nurse who recently moved to Boston, becomes almost obsessed with old-moneyed Vivian, “a creature of wealth,” after Vivian lands in the ER one night. When Vivian disappears from Mass General without a trace, Taylor’s search for answers pulls her into the Knox and its dark history…
What interested me — before I knew anything of Winn’s backstory— was that it felt like it was written by someone who just moved to Boston and was in awe of the city.
Living here, we might think of Rachel Dratch and Jimmy Fallon and Denise and Sully in those old “Boston Teen” SNL sketches, or Casey Affleck as the “King of Dunkin” as summing us up, at least in terms of how outsiders see us.
But Taylor, the Mass General nurse, almost fetishizes Boston, and old-moneyed New Englanders she imagines walking down every street.
Example: when old-Boston-money Vivian lands in the ER: Taylor “swallows, a flurry of excitement building in her chest… she envisioned that the city would be teeming with these ladies… That she would get to move among their world, learn from them, drink in their fanciness… letting that old New England generational wealth rub off on her until she glimmered with something of its gold dust…It is Boston, after all: the city of cobblestones and beauty, of Harvard and MIT, of sophistication and history.”
Winn, who grew up in New Jersey, moved to Boston 20 years ago after meeting her Boston-native husband Gil at UPenn. They now live in the Beacon Hill area with their two kids and 100-pound (yup) Bernedoodle.
After two decades here, she’s still “in awe.”
“I grew up in a 5,000-person town in New Jersey. When I came to Boston, I was struck by this beautiful city. Beacon Hill is one of the most historic and charming neighborhoods,” she tells me. “Living here, one might almost be inured to it, but I have this awe. I’m always struck by the cobblestone streets and the gaslit lamps.”
Winn even started a TikTok account for @theknoxsociety, documenting life on Beacon Hill.
This is Winn’s second novel, after 2022’s “Our Little World.” But “I’m not an overnight success by any shape or form,” she says with a laugh.
“I was a nurse and a nurse practitioner, but always loved writing and wrote on the side,” says Winn, who left Mass General in 2010. “It’s a typical writer’s story: I had hundreds of rejections for short stories.”
One of those rejections — from JFK Jr.’s “George Magazine” in 2000 — actually landed her in Newsweek recently.
I called Winn to talk opium, strange graveyard tour, a terrifying house fire, TikTok, and more.
Taylor arrives in Boston with a burning curiosity about the city. “What is Boston? Who are these people?” questions swimming in her head.
“Absolutely. When I came to Boston, I was so struck by this beautiful city. In my head, I could very clearly see the Knox building: The front is on Mount Vernon Street, and the back, I imagined to look like Branch Street. Branch isn’t the back of Mount Vernon, so I gave it a fictional name.”
I love that level of detail, though. No one outside Boston — or maybe even Beacon Hill— would ever know: oh, Branch Street isn’t in back of Mount Vernon. You have other specific references, like dining at 1928.
“I almost wish I’d been a little craftier [with adding more]. For instance, at one point I had Taylor get her knives sharpened at Blackstone’s. And it was just too much detail, so I pared it down. But sometimes I’m like, ‘Oh, I wish I kept that!’ [laughs]”
[laughs] That’s how it goes.
I don’t think I realized the effect each reference would have. There are book clubs now that tour Beacon Hill and go to spots mentioned. A few toured the Boston Atheneum, or dined at 1928. I didn’t realize how much people would connect to the sense of place. It feels like it’s been embraced by people in Boston, which is so fun.
Now 1928 has a cocktail named for your book. What are more specific inspirations that went into the novel?
“For the Knox, I took inspiration from The Somerset Club and The ‘Quin — the beautiful room with fireplaces and ornate details.
“And I was in a secret society in college: Tabard Society at UPenn.”
Wow, what was that like?
“I can’t tell you. [laughs]”
[laughs] Fair enough.
“But I loved that experience. When I was rushing [or trying to get in] you’d find out if you were invited by getting handwritten notes slipped under your door. I tapped into that with The Knox sending notes.”
You said your husband went with you on midnight strolls through Boston?
“Yes! I dragged him to some graveyard tours. We did one that —it was funny, because I’m not sure how I found it, but it definitely, like, wasn’t very legit.”
[laughs] OK.
“It was just us and this guy — we weren’t allowed inside any of the cemeteries. We’d watch the tours go on the inside, and the three of us would be standing on the outside. [laughs]”
[laughs] Amazing.
“My husband’s like, ‘Where did you find this guy?’ I don’t know.”
[laughs] This feels like a “Curb Your Enthusiasm” episode.
“It was quite an experience [laughs] And then, of course, I had to go back. We had to go back and do an official tour.
“And I toured the Nichols House Museum in Beacon Hill, which was neat to see another historic building and learn about family that lived there. I toured the Forbes House Museum in Milton. Forbes family was one of the Brahman families, they made their fortune in the opium trade.
“Also we had lived, at one point in the South End, and actually had a house fire. We were home at the time. Luckily, we were fine. But our house was a total loss.”
Oh my god.
“We each grabbed a kid and ran out at the door. It was pretty traumatic. Five minutes later, we would not have been able to go out that door. So, I tapped into that when I wrote the fire scene.”
Wow. That’s terrifying.
“As a writer, you store all these things up, and then go into your basket of experiences, and you get to use them.”
You also created a TikTok for the Knox. What sparked that, and how long will you keep that going?
“I’m having fun with it. I had no expectations when I started. I wasn’t big on TikTok. But having the account for the Knox itself allowed more creative freedom because I wasn’t putting myself out there — I was putting the Knox out there. So I’ve enjoyed creating these videos. Especially since the next novel is brewing in my head.”
What are you working on now?
“My next book focuses on a minor character mentioned in “The Society” — the bookstore owner, Nicholas. I was telling you earlier about those rejections — I actually wrote a short story about him years ago that was never published. It’s been living on my computer and in my head for all these years. I’m ready to tell the story. It will be another very Boston book.”
Catch Karen Winn on July 29 at Quincy’s Next Chapter Books & More.
Lauren Daley is a freelance culture writer. She can be reached at [email protected]. She tweets @laurendaley1, and Instagrams at @laurendaley1. Read more stories on Facebook here.
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O’Malley shot and killed a suspect in a carjacking in March. The swift decision to prosecute has prompted outrage by the police union and law enforcement officials.
O’Malley, 33, has pleaded not guilty to manslaughter for the death of Stephenson King, 39, who was shot March 11 while he allegedly tried to flee a traffic stop in a stolen car. Prosecutors determined that O’Malley had no justification for shooting at a moving vehicle.
“It is disappointing that the Suffolk County District Attorney’s Office is choosing to second-guess an officer whose only goal was to protect the public,” O’Malley’s lawyer, David Yannetti, said in an email to the Globe. “We will continue to vigorously defend this officer and this case.”
“The main issue in this case will be who the aggressor really was and whether Officer O’Malley acted in lawful defense,” Yannetti wrote in court filings.
On Wednesday, Yannetti filed several defense motions in the Roxbury division of Boston Municipal Court, in an effort to illustrate “King’s mayhem and reign of terror,” spanning nearly two decades and resulting in more than 17 criminal cases across Massachusetts, court records show.
Over the years, King has been charged with strangulation, assault and battery with a dangerous weapon, carjacking, breaking and entering, gun charges, and resisting arrest, according to court filings.
At the time of his death, King was free on bail for at least three separate felony cases, and had active warrants for his arrest, court records said.
O’Malley is seeking King’s mental health, criminal, and court records from all of his past cases, recordings from police body-worn and dash cameras, the medical examiner’s file on King, along with statements taken from O’Malley and witnesses at the scene of the shooting.
O’Malley told investigators that when he shot King he feared for his own life and for the life of another office on the scene, believing his colleague was about to be run over.
Police had pursued King after he allegedly committed a carjacking outside a pizza restaurant in Boston’s Mission Hill neighborhood. About 15 minutes later, officers stopped the stolen car less than a mile away, at Linwood Square in Roxbury.
The driver ignored “multiple verbal commands” as officers approached and tried to drive away, police said.
King opened the car window, but did not turn the vehicle off. O’Malley drew his Taser and shouted, “Bro, I’m going to [expletive] shoot you,” the police report said.
That’s when King backed into the cruiser behind him, then maneuvered the vehicle forward and back “in an attempt to escape the police,” according to the report.
As King started to drive forward again, O’Malley fired three shots through the driver’s window, striking King, the report said.
King’s family has contended that he was experiencing a mental health crisis in the hours leading up to the deadly encounter.
In court filings, O’Malley’s lawyer, Yannetti, said King gave “O’Malley no choice that night.”
“Any suggestion that this shooting was precipitated by simply a ‘mental health crisis’ completely misses the point,” Yannetti wrote. “When facing an extremely dangerous threat, there is no time for a police officer to hold a counseling session on the street or to sit down to discuss the feelings of a menace who is intent on using a motor vehicle as a deadly weapon.”
“If a man is going to assault and carjack an innocent woman then threaten the lives and safety of the public and a police officer, that man needs to be stopped — whether he is in his right mind or not,” according to O’Malley’s motion.
O”Malley’s next court date, a probable-cause hearing, is scheduled for May 21.
Tonya Alanez can be reached at tonya.alanez@globe.com. Follow her @talanez.
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