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Vengeance (Lew Fonseca Ser)

Vengeance (Lew Fonseca Ser)

List Price: $56.00
Your Price: $56.00
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 3 stars
Summary: A Great Read--Though Fonesca's No Rostnikov
Review: A finely crafted new character, Lew Fonesca, a Sarasota, Florida process server with both brain and heart who finds people with a little help from his friends. Very enjoyable read, and a real page turner. But as far as I'm concerned none of Mr. Kaminsky's many fine title characters come close to my very favorite: Porfiry Rostnikov ("The Tub") and his quirky band of crack Moscow detectives. Mr. Kaminsky can keep on writing the others, and Fonesca is one of his better ones, but I PRAY that he brings Porfiry back. I really miss him.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: a sad, balding process server based behind the DQ
Review: A very good story with a multitude of interesting characters. I am already impatiently waiting for the next Lewis Fonesca novel.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: After Rosnikov, a disappointment
Review: After having gone through almost every Rostnikov mystery with great joy, I was eagerly anticipating Kaminsky's new main protaganist, Lew Fonesca. But unfortunately I was disappointed. The characters just weren't that interesting to me, particularly Fonesca. I guess it's because I could identify more with Rostnikov - a sincere guy trying to do the best for himself, his family, and his fellow man. Fonesca, for whatever reason, seems aimless. Rostnikov was also grappling with "the system" whereas Fonesca had essentially dropped out. These observations are applicable to most of the characters in both stories.
The plot, though interesting and entertaining, was dominated by the personalities. And the intricacies and resolution of the plot came too late to have a major effect on how I responded to the book.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: After Rosnikov, a disappointment
Review: After having gone through almost every Rostnikov mystery with great joy, I was eagerly anticipating Kaminsky's new main protaganist, Lew Fonesca. But unfortunately I was disappointed. The characters just weren't that interesting to me, particularly Fonesca. I guess it's because I could identify more with Rostnikov - a sincere guy trying to do the best for himself, his family, and his fellow man. Fonesca, for whatever reason, seems aimless. Rostnikov was also grappling with "the system" whereas Fonesca had essentially dropped out. These observations are applicable to most of the characters in both stories.
The plot, though interesting and entertaining, was dominated by the personalities. And the intricacies and resolution of the plot came too late to have a major effect on how I responded to the book.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Very poorly edited
Review: After noticing that five people were sitting in four chairs in the high school office, I started looking for similar inconsistentcies. Are there editors or at least proofreaders at publishing companies these days? All the characters seemed to speak in the same voice and the old guy who's his friend seems way too much like the crazy old guy who lives in the swamp in Carl Hiasen's books. Get Toby Peters back to work.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: I enjoyed reading this book...
Review: and it is difficult not to like him.

I'm a fan of Kaminsky's Abe Lieberman series, but I like Lew even better. Picture someone in midlife who drifts to Florida when his wife dies; and puts together a very simplistic lifestyle in one of Florida's wealthiest communities. You get a great look at Sarasota from the back of a Dairy Queen! You get a hero with a real sense of humor and a knack with people who is masquerading as a process server. You get a strong set of supporting characters, particularly in Flo, Sally, Ames and the fascinating Harvey, a computer research maven and Dr. Ann Horowitz, Lew's elderly psychiatrist.

In "Vengeance", the first time we get together with Lew (a Stanley Tucci lookalike), Kaminsky has woven together two different mysteries, one of which is exceedingly difficult to figure out. The characters are more carefully drawn and the romance is soft and believable. Fonesca is someone could very probably have met in your own lifetime, and his unassuming habits and thoughts are in sharp contrast to his quick wit and humor... A tidbit...

"I'm gay, Mr. Fonesca. I told you." "Why do they call it gay? Most of the homosexuals I've known are smiling on the outside and depressed on the inside", I said. "Like you?" "There is a distinct similarity", I said, sinking back into the chair.

A great and breezy read; makes you want Kaminsky to keep returning to Lew in the future!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Lew Fonesca is a quirky everyman...
Review: and it is difficult not to like him.

I'm a fan of Kaminsky's Abe Lieberman series, but I like Lew even better. Picture someone in midlife who drifts to Florida when his wife dies; and puts together a very simplistic lifestyle in one of Florida's wealthiest communities. You get a great look at Sarasota from the back of a Dairy Queen! You get a hero with a real sense of humor and a knack with people who is masquerading as a process server. You get a strong set of supporting characters, particularly in Flo, Sally, Ames and the fascinating Harvey, a computer research maven and Dr. Ann Horowitz, Lew's elderly psychiatrist.

In "Vengeance", the first time we get together with Lew (a Stanley Tucci lookalike), Kaminsky has woven together two different mysteries, one of which is exceedingly difficult to figure out. The characters are more carefully drawn and the romance is soft and believable. Fonesca is someone could very probably have met in your own lifetime, and his unassuming habits and thoughts are in sharp contrast to his quick wit and humor... A tidbit...

"I'm gay, Mr. Fonesca. I told you." "Why do they call it gay? Most of the homosexuals I've known are smiling on the outside and depressed on the inside", I said. "Like you?" "There is a distinct similarity", I said, sinking back into the chair.

A great and breezy read; makes you want Kaminsky to keep returning to Lew in the future!

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: An easy-to-take mystery with a crew of quirky characters.
Review: I enjoyed "Vengeance," mostly because I liked the off-beat characters and the amusing dialogue. The Lew Fonseca character is very funny. Such characters as Lew's cut-rate therapist, the gun-toting sidekick, Lew's alcoholic but warm-hearted friend, Flo, and the computer hacker named Harvey are nicely portrayed. The plot is not particularly realistic or even all that interesting, but this book is worth reading for the droll and fairly strange people that Kaminsky has created.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Very poorly edited
Review: I enjoyed "Vengeance," mostly because I liked the off-beat characters and the amusing dialogue. The Lew Fonseca character is very funny. Such characters as Lew's cut-rate therapist, the gun-toting sidekick, Lew's alcoholic but warm-hearted friend, Flo, and the computer hacker named Harvey are nicely portrayed. The plot is not particularly realistic or even all that interesting, but this book is worth reading for the droll and fairly strange people that Kaminsky has created.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: An easy-to-take mystery with a crew of quirky characters.
Review: I enjoyed "Vengeance," mostly because I liked the off-beat characters and the amusing dialogue. The Lew Fonseca character is very funny. Such characters as Lew's cut-rate therapist, the gun-toting sidekick, Lew's alcoholic but warm-hearted friend, Flo, and the computer hacker named Harvey are nicely portrayed. The plot is not particularly realistic or even all that interesting, but this book is worth reading for the droll and fairly strange people that Kaminsky has created.


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