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Sunny Randall is a Boston P.I. and former cop, a college graduate, an aspiring painter, a divorcée, and the owner of a miniature bull terrier named Rosie. Hired by a wealthy family to locate their teenage daughter, Sunny is tested by the parents' preconceived notion of what a detective should be. With the help of underworld contacts, she tracks down the runaway Millicent, who has turned to prostitution. Rescuing her from a vicious pimp, Sunny finds herself the unlikely custodian of a show more difficult teenager when the girl refuses to return to her family. But Millicent's problems are rooted in much larger matters than running away, and Sunny, now playing the role of bodyguard, is caught in a shooting war with some very serious mobsters. She turns for help to her ex-husband, Richie, himself the son of a mob family, and to her dearest friend, Spike, a flamboyant and dangerous gay man. Heading this unlikely alliance, Sunny must solve at least one murder and resolve a criminal conspiracy that reaches to the top of state government. show lessTags
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I absolutely adore Robert B. Parker's books and have for years. Sunny Randall is Parker's first female private eye, but she has much in common with Spenser and Jesse Stone while still being her own character. She believes in being as self-sufficient as possible, but doesn't have the same set moral code that Spenser does. Like Jesse she's working through a divorce that hasn't ended the relationship with her ex, but she doesn't have the same alcohol problems and she has a much more secure support network. One of my favorite parts of the book was getting to see the Boston crime network that Parker has created from a different viewpoint than Spenser's. In this outing Sunny is hired to find a 15 year old runaway from a wealthy, but not so show more loving, home. Sunny finds Millicent fairly quickly, but then struggles to figure out what precisely is the right thing to do with her. Return her to the parents who don't appear to care? Let her return to her life hooking on the streets? Keep her? Then a couple of goons show up also looking for Millicent and everything gets much more complicated. While Parker's Spenser series continues to please, the Sunny Randall and Jesse Stone series provide an opportunity to play with characters who are a little less finished and set in their ways - there's more room to grow here. I'm looking forward to re-reading the rest of the series and reading the new entry Spare Change for the first time. show less
A pretty good detective story. Robert Parker came up with the character Sunny Randall toward the end of his career. She is a private detective with lots of baggage: an ex-husband she can't quite let go of, her retired Police Captain Father and more. In a way Sunny Randall is too much like a feminine version of Parker's best character who would be Spencer. No need to give an outline of the plot. It's a good story with suspense and violence.
Family Honor is the book in which noted crime writer Robert B. Parker introduced his readers to Sonya (Sunny) Randall, a college-educated former cop, the daughter of a cop, and currently a private detective. He eventually wrote five other books featuring her, and in several of them, she crosses paths with (and becomes the occasional lover of) Jesse Stone, another of Parker’s popular characters. Although she weighs only 115 pounds, she is as tough as nails. She talks like a guy and (except for a few references to her make-up) she thinks like a guy. This doesn’t bother me because I, too, think like a guy. Some female readers may think Parker should have conferred with Betty Friedan, but I didn’t notice anything unbelievable about show more Sunny. (However, like I said, I’m a guy.)
Sunny is hired by a wealthy, prominent couple to find their run-away daughter, a task which proves to be not too difficult for a clever investigator. However, having found the young lady (who has been working as a prostitute to get by, but who hates her parents, and does not want to go home), Sunny has a problem deciding what to do with her. Sunny’s task is complicated by several very bad men who seem willing to kill Sunny, the young lady, or both of them. Fortunately, Sunny has some assistance from her ex-husband Richie (whose father and uncle are mobsters) and her large, very tough gay friend Spike. Richie and Spike are both delightful characters who will appear in the later Sunny Randall novels.
(Spoiler alert, sort of.) All’s well that ends well, and Sunny kills one bad guy herself (but not without some remorse), arranges for the early demise of the worst bad guy, and teaches the young run-away how to be an independent woman. As in the other 20 or so Parker novels I have read, the plot moves along at a nice pace and keeps the reader’s interest—but that is not why you read these books. What makes them fun to read is the characters and their snappy dialog. This one is as good as most of the others.
(JAB) show less
Sunny is hired by a wealthy, prominent couple to find their run-away daughter, a task which proves to be not too difficult for a clever investigator. However, having found the young lady (who has been working as a prostitute to get by, but who hates her parents, and does not want to go home), Sunny has a problem deciding what to do with her. Sunny’s task is complicated by several very bad men who seem willing to kill Sunny, the young lady, or both of them. Fortunately, Sunny has some assistance from her ex-husband Richie (whose father and uncle are mobsters) and her large, very tough gay friend Spike. Richie and Spike are both delightful characters who will appear in the later Sunny Randall novels.
(Spoiler alert, sort of.) All’s well that ends well, and Sunny kills one bad guy herself (but not without some remorse), arranges for the early demise of the worst bad guy, and teaches the young run-away how to be an independent woman. As in the other 20 or so Parker novels I have read, the plot moves along at a nice pace and keeps the reader’s interest—but that is not why you read these books. What makes them fun to read is the characters and their snappy dialog. This one is as good as most of the others.
(JAB) show less
So nice to see well written crime mystery from a female point of view. There are some similarities to her character and Jesse Stone in the flaws, but Sunny is a more enjoyable read. Jess can come off like the James Bond of policemen at times.
Let's face it, Sunny isn't Spenser. But she's still tougher and more fun than most... Here she's trying to save a young girl who's seen too much and is being pursued by the criminals - usual philosophical treatises on self-reliance and personal strength and integrity - which, don't get me wrong, hit my heartstrings every time.
Sunny Randall isn't Spenser. But she's still great. In this, her first case, she goes up against a crime syndicate to save a teenage girl from a loveless family situation.
Sonny Randall used to be a cop, now she's a PI in Boston, living with her dog, Rosie, painting, and trying hard to work out where her relationship with her ex-husband is going to go from here (the weekly dinner's out aren't helping) and where her relationship with cop Brian is going to go either.
This case has her looking for runaway Millicent Patton, her parents appear to be a bit unconcerned and really only looking for her for form's sake. When Sunny finds her she has to decide what she's going to do with her. When there's an attempt on both of their lives Sunny has to find out a lot more about her client's backgrounds.
I really did enjoy reading this one, Sunny came across as a strong woman who takes no prisoners and who understands show more what working in a man's world involves. show less
This case has her looking for runaway Millicent Patton, her parents appear to be a bit unconcerned and really only looking for her for form's sake. When Sunny finds her she has to decide what she's going to do with her. When there's an attempt on both of their lives Sunny has to find out a lot more about her client's backgrounds.
I really did enjoy reading this one, Sunny came across as a strong woman who takes no prisoners and who understands show more what working in a man's world involves. show less
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126+ Works 72,849 Members
Robert Brown Parker is an American fiction writer of mysteries. He was born in Springfield, Massachusetts and earned his BA degree from Colby College in Waterville, Maine. He went on to earn his master's degree in English literature from Boston University. He started his career working in advertising. After some years, he went back to school to show more earn his PhD in English from Boston University in 1971. He then began his writng career while teaching at Northeastern University. He decided to become a full-time writer in 1979. His most popular works were the 40 novels written about the private detective Spenser. The ABC Television Network developed the television series "Spenser: For Hire", based on the character in the mid-1980s. Parker also wrote nine novels based on the character Jesse Stone and six novels based on the character Sunny Randall. On January 18, 2010, Robert Parker died suddenly of a heart attack at his home in Cambridge Massachusetts. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
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Awards and Honors
Distinctions
Series
Common Knowledge
- Canonical title
- Family Honor
- Original publication date
- 1999
- People/Characters
- Sunny Randall; Millicent Patton; Richie Burke; Brian Kelly
- Important places
- Boston, Massachusetts, USA
- Dedication
- For Joan: I concentrate on you.
- First words
- Their last months together had been gothic.
- Last words
- (Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)Then I kissed him and closed my eyes, and the darkness was all there was.
- Disambiguation notice
- ISBN 0425177068 is for Family Honor; not Melancholy Baby
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- Reviews
- 15
- Rating
- (3.66)
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- Media
- Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 26
- UPCs
- 1
- ASINs
- 10




















































