Author: David Rosenfelt
Series: Andy Carpenter (Book 33)
Publication: Minotaur Books (July 7, 2026)
Description: Bestselling author David Rosenfelt returns with Dead Men Don't Play Fetch as Andy Carpenter investigates a wealthy dog lover's unusual death.
It’s defense lawyer Andy Carpenter’s dream to retire. That goal is once again thwarted when he gets a call from Lou Campanelli, an old friend who he simply cannot refuse, asking for a favor. Lou runs a rehab center, and when one of his patients, a homeless veteran, is charged with first degree murder, he needs Andy's help. And of course, Andy will also be called on to care for the accused’s dog, but that’s okay: What's one more dog?
The man that Jason Maddox is accused of stabbing to death is none other than billionaire Paul Vincent, an eccentric businessman and inventor. Bickert dedicated a great portion of his life to philanthropy, with a soft spot for dog-related causes. This led him to befriend Jason, a physicist and war hero, whose life fell apart to the point where he ended up on the streets with his dog, just trying to survive.
But why would Jason possibly have wanted to kill him? Well, for one thing, he was to receive a fortune in Vincent's will. That, coupled with the fact that Jason was at the scene, his fingerprints were on the knife, and Vincent's wallet was in his jacket, made it a slam dunk arrest.
Once again, Andy is enmeshed in a puzzling, twisty case. But in order to reunite a man and his dog, Andy will have to untangle it all.
My Thoughts: Andy is actively pursuing retirement when he gets a call from old friend Ou Campanelli asking him to defend Jason Maddox who has been accused of murder. Maddox's life fell apart when his son died by shark attack, but he is starting over at Lou's rehab facility.
It looks like a slam dunk for the prosecution. Jason was found standing over Paul Vincent's body with his fingerprint on the knife, Vincent's blood on his hands and clothing, and Paul's wallet in Jason's jacket pocket. Jason claims innocence and Andy has to prove it.
Vincent was an eccentric billionaire. He and Jason were friends, but Vincent also has a pile of enemies. He was known for suing people who he felt wronged him. He was also a philanthropist who left his billions to many charitable causes. Jason would benefit under the will by inheriting money and Vincent's unused patents which looks like a motive for him to have murdered Vincent.
As Andy and his team begin to look into Vincent's life, they discover that the company he bought himself out of is currently in financial need and taking money from drug overlords. That looks suspicious to Andy and so do the deaths of the company lawyer and another client of Lou's rehab facility.
Andy is determined to get Jason off by establishing reasonable doubt which runs him afoul of one of those drug lords. One Andy has tangled with previously.
This was another entertaining mystery. I really like Andy's personality and his relationships with his friends.


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