Another great review for "Damnation Street," this one in Sunday's Philadelphia Inquirer and written by the Inquirer's Book Editor Frank Wilson. The review calls the novel a, "thriller with literary flair," and "moral depth." Wilson was particularly impressed with "the man who called himself John Foy," the hired gun and long-time nemesis of our hero Scott Weiss. "Whatever you want to call him," Wilson says of the multi-named assassin, "he takes his place among the creepiest characters ever to inhabit the pages of a book." Wilson goes on to praise Andrew's prose as being "minimalist" yet "poetic," and adds: "The world Klavan depicts is one seen through a filter of emotional desolation and moral tension. For, make no mistake, moral choice is at the heart of this tale."