Mob Justice

Mob Justice is a crime thriller with a strong legal thriller streak, and it pulls those two lanes together better than I expected. The story follows federal prosecutor Blake Hudson as he gets shoved from the fallout of a past covert operation into a fresh fight against organized crime in Chicago, while Enzo Renzi, a mob insider with a complicated past, tries to survive an assassination attempt that opens the door to betrayals, shifting loyalties, and a deeper look at how power actually works. What I came away with most was the book’s interest in the blurry space between justice, loyalty, and survival, especially as it moves between DOJ rooms in Washington and the mob world in Chicago.

This book moves. The opening hospital escape is sharp and tense, and the author has a real feel for dropping a reader into chaos without making the scene feel muddy. I also liked how much personality comes through in the dialogue. People don’t all sound the same here, which matters in a thriller like this. Blake has a dry, controlled edge. Enzo feels more layered than I expected, almost split between polish and danger. And Alyssa Russo has the kind of presence that can tilt a scene the second she walks into it. There’s also a confidence in the writing that comes from knowing the terrain. The DOJ material and the organized crime material both feel authentic.

What I really enjoyed, though, was the author’s choice to keep pressing on the idea that the line between the good guys and the bad guys isn’t clean. That could have turned into something heavy-handed, but here it mostly lands because the book lets institutions and individuals both look compromised in believable ways. Blake isn’t presented as some spotless hero, and Enzo isn’t reduced to a simple villain. That tension gave the book more bite for me. Sometimes the novel leans into its own intricacy, and there were stretches where I had to slow down and reorient myself among the alliances, histories, and reveals. Still, I would rather a thriller aim high than play everything flat and safe. This one has ambition and you can feel it.

Mob Justice delivered what I want from this genre: pressure, intrigue, character friction, and enough moral unease to keep the whole thing from becoming just another shootout-and-conspiracy story. I would recommend it most to readers who like crime thrillers, legal thrillers, and political thrillers that care as much about systems and loyalties as they do about action. It will especially appeal to people who enjoy fast pacing but also want a book with some backbone behind the suspense.

Pages: 431 | ASIN : B0GHZBPT66

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The Literary Titan is an organization of professional editors, writers, and professors that have a passion for the written word. We review fiction and non-fiction books in many different genres, as well as conduct author interviews, and recognize talented authors with our Literary Book Award. We are privileged to work with so many creative authors around the globe.

Posted on April 14, 2026, in Book Reviews, Five Stars and tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , . Bookmark the permalink. Leave a comment.

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