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Pale Kings And Princes

Pale Kings And Princes

List Price: $30.00
Your Price: $30.00
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 1 stars
Summary: An insult to any intelligent reader
Review: I found this book to have little redeeming value. The dialog is particularly crude and the "detective" work is simplistic.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: An insult to any intelligent reader
Review: I found this book to have little redeeming value. The dialog is particularly crude and the "detective" work is simplistic.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: An insult to any intelligent reader
Review: I found this book to have little redeeming value. The dialog is particularly crude and the "detective" work is simplistic.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Darn good read
Review: I thought this book, like other Spenser books I have read or listened to was well worth the time. Parker has a definite knack for keeping you entertained. Admittedly I liked Playmates and Widening Gyre a little better, I would not pass on this book at all. Having read the other reviews I am anxious to get into more Spenser novels because if this one is middle of the road, then I can't wait for the others. The story centers around the murder of a journalist investigating a small town in Massachussetts that seems to be the cocaine depot of the northeast. Parker's storytelling and Spenser's keen wit make it a quick read.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Darn good read
Review: I thought this book, like other Spenser books I have read or listened to was well worth the time. Parker has a definite knack for keeping you entertained. Admittedly I liked Playmates and Widening Gyre a little better, I would not pass on this book at all. Having read the other reviews I am anxious to get into more Spenser novels because if this one is middle of the road, then I can't wait for the others. The story centers around the murder of a journalist investigating a small town in Massachussetts that seems to be the cocaine depot of the northeast. Parker's storytelling and Spenser's keen wit make it a quick read.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Vintage Parker
Review: Spenser is hired to find out who killed reporter Eric Valdez. Valdez's assignment was to get to the bottom of the cocaine trade in Wheaton, Massachusetts, but the town is owned by the Columbians, including the police force. So Spenser does what he does best. He parks himself in town and asks questions until he annoys enough people and something shakes loose.

I read this book years ago and just re-read it. I think it stands up well. I've always liked the Spenser series because of it's dialog between Spenser and Hawk. Actually the dialog between Spenser and whoever he's talking to always crackles. I also like the fact that the story makes sense. Many mystery/crime novels today depend on the serial killer schtick but to me Parker's mysteries are always grounded on something believable. Cocaine trade in Wheaton, Massachusetts? Might seem ridiculous at first but after it's explained it makes perfect sense. It could happen that way and the story that follows also could have happened that way.

Anyway, like all of the Spenser series I enjoyed it and recommend it. It's not deep literature but it is a fast enjoyable read.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Not one of the best, but worth it if you love Spenser
Review: This book was certainly not one of Robert Parker's best but it as a good read. It is also a very fast read and there is never a lull in the action of the book. Spenser's great dry wit and creative responses continue to be some of the many reasons we can't get enough of this character. Sometimes I found some of the events in this book to be a little farfetched but that is what I love about these books and the stories Parker brings to us. He is a great storyteller and if you have never read one of his books do so now. Bottom line on this book: if you are a fan of spenser buy it but if you have never read any of the spenser books(not that there is a certain order) you might want to start you spenser addiction with Early Autumn or All Our Yesterdays.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: A solid entry in the Spenser canon.
Review: This is not a spectacular book but a solid one. It took me over 2 decades(!!) to acquire a taste for Spenser but am now caught. Drug trafficking is almost a McGuffin in this book about drugs but also about dedication, honorability, pursuit of truth, corruption, and painful tragedy. Parker does not write easy books, but, as far as I have read him, does not write bad books, either. Solid and entertaining.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Back On Track
Review: This one is definitely back on the track. Parker's last two Spenser novels just plain stunk. This would be better if he had managed to lose Selfish Susan permanently, but oh well.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Parker & Spenser just going through the motions on this one
Review: Well, boys and girls, here we are at the fourteenth Spenser novel and it is probably too early to tell if our hero is in decline or if Robert B. Parker is just idling at this point. Our hero is hired by a newspaper to investigate the murder of one of its reporters who was checking out the cocaine trade in the central Massachusetts town of Wheaton. Spenser shows up, starts asking questions of practically everybody in town, but the responses are all the same: nobody knows anything except that maybe he should stop asking questions. But since the police are tailing him and the local Columbian cocaine kingpin threatens him, Spenser figures he must be on the right track and that if he just keeps making a nuisance of himself sooner or later something will slip through the cracks.

In the wake of the epic storyline in which Susan Silverman leaves Spenser and eventually has to be rescued by our hero and Hawk, it is not surprising we are getting a series of more intimate adventures. The sense that Parker is going through the motions at this point comes from the little things: Spenser and Susan are happy and content without any mention to the personal traumas that compelled her to head to California in the first place, and their happiness consists of lots of sex, even more looking at one another, and virtually no cooking. On top of that I do not think he hits anybody in the entire book. No, this does not sound like the real Spenser to me either. For the first time I get the feeling Parker is starting to repeat himself a bit, since he continues his streak of getting people killed by just asking the wrong questions and Hawk always need to show up to help save the day. However, Susan does provide necessary psychological analysis at a key moment, so that degree from Harvard is getting good use. My main complaint would be that the resolution is rather abrupt and smacks a bit too much of just being over and done with, which knocks it down one star. I admit looking forward to the next book with some trepidation (But I have started reading "Crimson Joy" since I wrote my first draft of this review and its off to a VERY good start). As always, these books are easy reads well suited to the computer lifestyle: I have been polishing off at least one of these a day and that is without really trying to sneak in chapters here and there all day long at work.


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