Texarkana Gazette

‘K Street Killing’ a Washington whodunit

- By Alex Gangitano

WASHINGTON—As congressio­nal aides with vulnerable bosses wonder if they’ll still have a job come 2019, a former Capitol Hill staffer wrote a novel about just that.

The Library of Congress’ Colleen Shogan decided to set the fourth installmen­t of her Washington Whodunit series, “K Street Killing,” in the middle of a tense midterm election.

“It’s … a matter of fact of what happens here on Capitol Hill—the uncertainl­y, particular­ly in the past 20 years, of the fact that either house usually has a chance of flipping during most election cycles,” Shogan said. “It really places additional­ly stress on congressio­nal staff due to the unpredicta­bility of the situation.”

Her protagonis­t, Kit Marshall, works for fictional vulnerable North Carolina congresswo­man Maeve Dixon. At a fundraiser for Dixon’s campaign, a powerful K Street tycoon plummets to his death when he tumbles off the roof of lobbyist haunt Charlie Palmer Steak.

“When I was thinking about the series and different situations that I can put Kit in, I always thought that basing it around an election season and a really close campaign would make a lot of sense,” Shogan said. “I worked for a senator who was in a very tough re-election race when I worked in Congress, and I just remember that it was a very stressful and tensiontim­e in the office.”

After her own years racing the Capitol halls, she feels for staffers there now.

“People don’t fully appreciate sort of the difficulti­es that people who work in Washington, the difficult conditions that they work under,” she said. “There’s not a lot of job security, and a lot of times, some of the decisions that are made are decisions that you can’t control. You can’t control how people vote in a district or a state.”

Her readership beyond the Hill could learn a lesson from the novel, Shogan said.

“I’m also trying to provide some informatio­n and educate them about what Capitol Hill is actually like … to sort of educate them, yeah there’s an election going on but this is how it affects real people, I think is important,” she said.

And for current staffers reading it, she thinks the story will seem familiar.

“A lot a staff, I think they’ll self-identify with that sort of feeling that I’m trying to convey in this book,” she said. “It’s not supposed to have any great revelation­s in it, I don’t think, except to validate some of those feelings.”

“K Street Killing” was released July 15.

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