As a prosecuting attorney in Houston, Penn Cage sent hardened killers to death row. But it is as mayor of his hometown - Natchez, Mississippi - that Penn will face his most dangerous threat. Urged by old friends to try to restore this fading jewel of the Old South, Penn has ridden into office on a tide of support for change. But in its quest for new jobs and fresh money, Natchez, like other Mississippi towns, has turned to casino gambling, and now five fantastical steamboats float on the river beside the old slave market at Natchez like props from Gone With the Wind. But one boat isn't like the others. Rumor has it that the Magnolia Queen has found a way to pull the big players from Las Vegas to its Mississippi backwater. And with them - on sleek private jets that slip in and out of town like whispers in the night - come pro football players, rap stars, and international gamblers, all sharing an unquenchable taste for one thing: blood sport - and the dark vices that go with it. When a childhood friend of Penn's who brings him evidence of these crimes is brutally murdered, the full weight of Penn's failure to protect his city hits home. So begins his quest to find the men responsible. But it's a hunt he begins alone, for the local authorities have been corrupted by the money and power of his hidden enemy. With his family's lives at stake, Penn realizes his only allies in his one-man war are those bound to him by blood or honor. Together they must defeat a sophisticated killer who has an almost preternatural ability to anticipate - and counter - their every move. Ultimately, victory will depend on a bold stroke that will leave one of Penn's allies dead - and Natchez changed forever. After appearing in two of Iles's most popular novels, Penn Cage makes his triumphant return as a brilliant, honorable, and courageous hero. Rich with Southern atmosphere and marked by one jaw-dropping plot turn after another, The Devil's Punchbowl confirms that Greg lies is America's master of suspense. Greg Iles was born in 1960 in Germany, where his father ran the U.S. Embassy medical clinic during the height of the Cold War. After graduating from the University of Mississippi in 1983, he performed for several years with the rock band Frankly Scarlet and is currently a member of the band The Rock Bottom Remainders. His first novel, Spandau Phoenix , a thriller about Nazi war criminal Rudolf Hess, was published in 1993 and became a New York Times bestseller. Iles went on to write numerous bestselling novels, including Third Degree , True Evil , Turning Angel , Blood Memory , The Footprints of God , and 24 Hours (released by Sony Pictures as Trapped , with full screenwriting credit for Iles). He lives in Natchez, Mississippi. From The Washington Post's Book World/washingtonpost.com Reviewed by Patrick Anderson There is a lot going on in Greg Iles's third novel featuring Penn Cage, the mayor of Natchez, Miss., but finally it's a story about evil. Cage, a lawyer and successful novelist, has run for mayor of his home town to save it from troubles that he believes are largely caused by de facto school segregation. His challenge grows even greater when he confronts two Irishmen who run one of the floating gambling casinos that have done much to rejuvenate the Mississippi economy. Their boat, the Magnolia Queen, makes available illegal drugs, teenage prostitutes and dogfights to attract high rollers from out of state. When Cage tries to stop them, he finds that these two psychopaths will gladly murder, rape, torture, bribe and kidnap to maintain their power. Some readers may toss the novel aside because of its scenes of horrific violence. Others will tolerate the violence because Iles is a talented writer who puts the horror in a believable context. Penn Cage is a solid portrait of a good man trying to do a hard job for a city he loves: "For sheer beauty Natchez is unmatched along the length of the river; with its commanding site above the river Mississippi it surpasses even New Orleans, and one would have to travel to Charleston or Savannah to find comparable architecture." Iles gives us a good sense of the city and the woes of being its mayor. Cage is also a widower trying to raise a beloved 11-year-old daughter. But everything he has accomplished, personally and politically, is imperiled by the two corrupt gamblers. At the outset, a friend who works at the gambling casino tells Cage of illegality aboard the ship -- and in the wooded hideaways where dogfights are staged -- and soon that friend has been mauled to death by dogs. When Cage sets out to investigate the charges, the two gangsters visit his home. They come armed with guns, knives and a well-trained bully kutta, a Pakistani breed celebrated for its size, strength and fearlessness. The gangsters tell Cage that unless he does exactly as they say, they will not only murder him, they'll kill his daughter, parents and friends. Cage pretends to go along, but of course h