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Loading... Back Storyby Robert B. Parker
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. This was one of the better Spencer novels. I like Hawk and he played a big part. Spencer takes on a case, being paid a dozen Krispy Kream donuts. A woman is killed in a botched bank robbery back in the 60's. It was not solved. Spencer goes about solving the murder. ( )Spenser, a tough PI, goes 28 years into the past and through mob connections to solve an old murder. I feel I would have enjoyed this book more if I'd read previous Spenser novels. This audio book was read by Joe Mantegna, whom I love as Joan's father on Joan of Arcadia. Spenser and Susan get a new dog, Pearl II, and Spenser looks into a 28 year old bank robbery in which the mother of a client was killed. Parker becomes a self parody--not much. Robert Parker books are always fun, fast reads. People like Parker; they like the repartee and the fast action and the satisfying endings. I like the fact that his format and characters are about the same, but he has quite a lot of different plots (unlike another of my favorite mystery writers, Janet Evanovich). This particular book has a plot I found especially interesting. Cold cases are in style right now, and I can remember the bank robbing hippies era pretty well. 0.048 seconds to build listing
Amazon.com (ISBN 0399149775, Hardcover)In this 30th entry in one of mystery fiction's longest-running and best-loved series, Spenser--the tough yet sensitive Boston private eye with no first name--takes on an unsolved murder nearly three decades old. The client, an actress, is a friend of Paul Giacomin, Spenser's surrogate son (who first appeared in 1981's Early Autumn). Her mother was slain by leftist radicals at a bank holdup in 1974, and now she wants to know who fired the shot. As Spenser digs into the past, he soon learns that powerful people on both sides of the law want the case left alone--badly enough to kill.These death threats provide a fine excuse for Hawk, Spenser's extremely scary (yet sensitive) bad-guy pal, to tag along in nearly every scene as bodyguard. The interaction of the two friends is one of this series's familiar pleasures, as is the presence of Susan Silverman, Spenser's longtime love interest. Another pleasure is Parker's stripped-down prose, a marvel of craftsmanship as smooth as 18-year-old Scotch. (Plus we get the first meeting between Spenser and Jesse Stone, hero of another Parker series.) Alas, the whole enterprise feels a little tired. The plot never generates much sustained suspense, and the author's adoration for his central characters renders them at times almost cartoonesque. Still, Back Story is excellently prepared comfort food, even if it isn't five-star cuisine. --Nicholas H. Allison (retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:57:54 -0400) The first test round has been closed. Visit the Open Shelves Classification group for details. |
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