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Bad Business

Bad Business

List Price: $24.95
Your Price: $16.47
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Spenser is always a delight
Review: No case is ever easy for Boston private detective Spenser. Wealthy socialite Marlene Rowley hires Spenser to find evidence that her husband Trent, the CEO of Kinergy (an energy trading business), is cheating on her. He tails Trent and quickly learns he is having an affair with Ellen Eisen and that another sleuth is following Ellen, whose husband Bernard also works at Kinergy.

Spenser's case becomes ludicrous when he realizes that a third private detective is following Marlene. On only Spenser's second day of surveillance, Trent is murdered in his office during working hours and nobody saw a thing. Marlene wants Spenser to find out who made her a widow, which leads Spenser into a cesspool containing sexual predators, financial finagling and serial killers.

It has been three decades since Robert B. Parker write the first Spenser novel and the series is as fresh, innovative and appealing today as it was then. The sublime but well written story line is fun to follow as private sleuthing seems like a lucrative business at least in the Boston area. Told in the first person from Spenser's point of view, BAD BUSINESS is a work of humorous prose and fantastic characterizations.

Harriet Klausn

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Feh.
Review: Oh isn't Susan just so wonderful? Shouldn't all women be like Susan Silverman? And isn't Spenser lucky to have her? Everybody says so. Indeed, all women who are not Susan Silverman might as well kill themselves. They are mere peons who should not even be allowed to bathe in the shining light which emanates from Spenser's perfect girlfriend. So what if she cannot cook. Her perfect and devoted boyfriend can so all is right with the world.

Hence, the problem with this and all of the other Spenser mysteries I have read. Spenser and Susan are so wonderful and perfect that they become nauseating. They never have any conflict. As a result, these books, while quick and enjoyable reads, are insubstantial. The prose that makes Hemingway sound verbose only makes the story even thinner.

Perhaps, Parker should write a book entirely devoted to Hawk, who, although as improbably perfect as Spenser and Susan, is a much more interesting character because he could kill you as easily as look at you.

One virtue of this book, Spenser is irreverently funny and I did laugh out loud at some of his quips.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Parker continues to surprise, please and entertain
Review: One of the finest gifts the first few months of a new year can bring is a new Spenser novel. Spenser and his creator, Robert B. Parker, have become, at least in some circles, cultural institutions. Parker is on record as stating that he will continue to write Spenser novels as long as people want them, and certainly there appears to be no flagging of interest in them. He has been careful to make changes only on minor elements of Spenser's surroundings, while keeping the primary elements, such as friends and personalities, pretty much intact. The result is a comfortable but dependable familiarity that kicks in as soon as one begins a Spenser novel.

This leaves Parker free to gently experiment with plot lines and the secondary characters who populate them. Reading a Spenser novel is like walking once a week down a familiar street where everything is slightly different: here, there's a new store, there, a fresh and different coat of paint on some shutters, and there, yes, right there, a new and interesting face with a story to tell. All of those elements make the walk worthwhile; so, too, is the annual visit with Spenser.

BAD BUSINESS, the latest Spenserian saga, finds fiction's most self-satisfied detective with a new client named Marlene Cowley. Cowley is a slightly difficult woman, and Parker almost immediately displays one of his many strengths as he describes Spenser's slow but steady deflation of her through the use of lighthearted, deprecating repartee in the course of extracting information. Cowley retains Spenser because she suspects that her husband, Trent, is cheating on her and wants, shall we say, to catch the cad in flagrante delicto. Spenser has an easy enough time catching Trent in compromising circumstances, but discovers not only that there is someone shadowing Trent's paramour but also that Cowley is being shadowed as well! This doesn't just pique Spenser's curiosity; it impales it.

As he is wont to do in such cases, Spenser is soon operating far beyond the boundaries of the investigation for which he was retained. All the investigatory roads lead back to Trent's employer, Kinergy, more so when Trent is found murdered in his own office. Trent's position at Kinergy was chief financial officer, and Spenser is accordingly suspicious that greed, and not passion, may be the motivating factor behind Trent's unexpected demise. When a second Kinergy employee is also murdered, Spenser begins kicking over rocks to see what comes crawling out. Hawk is there to help, as only Hawk can, and of course Susan Silverman is on hand as well, acting as soul mate, foil and even occasional Devil's advocate.

The financial element of BAD BUSINESS also permits Parker to bring Marty Siegel, the self-styled best accountant in the world, into the mix to explain some basic but questionable accounting principles to Spenser. The dialogue between Spenser and Siegel is some of Parker's best to date, instructive without being burdensome, and always entertaining. Parker in fact relies a bit more on dialogue and somewhat less on violence than he has in more recent novels, which should please those readers with more delicate sensibilities. Regardless of his underpinnings, however, Parker never lets his story flag, and when Spenser assembles the cast for the explanatory denouement, the motive, opportunity and instigator are at once surprising and obvious.

If Parker is tired of writing Spenser novels, he certainly shows no signs of it. He continues to surprise, please and entertain. What more can one ask for? A guest appearance from another Parker series, perhaps? Well, BAD BUSINESS has one of those too, at least by reference. Careful readers will be rewarded, if only momentarily.

--- Reviewed by Joe Hartlaub

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Getting Old
Review: Parker has been doing these characters so long that he's begun giving them all the same pat lines. I hate doing a negative, but they're getting boring. How many times do we have to see the line "We'd be fools not to." Not only Spenser, but Susan, Hawk, the cops, Jesse Stone and at least two characters in the Sunny Randall series. This particular book...and I have copies of virtually all the others.. is wooden and uncreative. I guess the style became so successful that it seems smart to just continue. However, I got no sense of creativity or caring in this one.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Outstanding addition to the series
Review: Parker is in top form as Spenser investigates financial and sexual escapades in an Enron-like company. The book is heavier on plot than some of his later works which is a welcome development. As usual the dialogue is amusing and literate. Susan, Hawk, Rita Fiore, and Vinnie Morris all return. Hawk has a new girlfriend and it appears to be a serious relationship. I hope we see more of her in the next book.

I was interested in another reviewer's comment that Spenser was the new Travis McGee. I remember that when John MacDonald died, I wondered if there was another author whose new books I could anticipate with the same eagerness, knowing that reading them would be sheer joy. Then I discovered Parker and Spenser!

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Thoroughly Mediocre
Review: Parker takes Enron, throws in some wife-swapping, adds a psycho radio talk show host and a few murders, mixes them together and gets a recipe that turns out a not so great mystery novel.

There is the usual repartee of Spenser and Susan (a lot)and Hawk (not enough), but the plot just does not flow. Spenser follows and questions, and meets, greets and questions some more, but there is never any tension and virtually no conflict. The wife-swapping characters are barely introduced so you really don't care about them in any fashion. The substance of the book is the dialogue, which is good, but not good enough to carry a novel.

This is pure low to middle of the road Spenser fare. A quick read that is probably worth passing up to look for a more inspired earlier effort of Mr. parker.


Rating: 3 stars
Summary: This one is weaker than most of the books in the series
Review: Robert B. Parker as always provides crisp and interesting dialogue and once in a while, laugh out loud humor.

However, the plot seems cobbled together using disparate elements from an Enron-like business scandle, an unlikely sex club and one really evil guy.

For Spenser fans, the humor and dialogue are worth the price of the book. I agree that newcomers to the series will enjoy "Early Autumn", "Pastime" or "Playmates" much more.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: The Best Spenser Novel in Many Years
Review: Robert Parker's remarkable characters, stunning dialogue and his quixotic focus on seeking the impossible dream are present in all of the Spenser books. In recent years, the plots have been getting thinner and thinner, however . . . and even the repartee seems mostly for show rather than to build naturally on a great story. But in Bad Business, the original Parker genius reappears for a time. As in the best of the early books in the series, Bad Business has a fascinating and often surprising plot involving the twin sins of adultery and greed.

The opening of the book has some of the best plot development I have ever read, filled with clever misdirection that plays on our assumptions from having read too many boiler-plate mystery novels.
In fact, if the book had concluded after 125 pages, I would have described this as one of the very best Spenser novels.

Unfortunately, the book bogs down in solving the mystery. Although the slow pace was probably intended to maintain an intriguing suspense, the pace just seems to drag instead to an inevitable conclusion. I think the mistake was to base part of the plot a little too closely to a recent corporate collapse. That connection telegraphed part of the ending too soon.

I won't attempt to describe the situation of the book, for I will risk spoiling the book for you. Instead, let me advise you to read carefully and keep an open mind as you do.

As I finished this book, I realized that part of the appeal of popular novels is that they take us places where we would never go on our own. When done well, they pique and satisfy our curiosity in harmless ways. I look forward to taking future such excursions with Mr. Parker and Spenser in the future.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Enronning ahead of the pack
Review: Series detectives live in leap-year time, as if they were all born on February 29th. Thus, although they dwell in "real" time, they age about one year for every four the rest of us mortals face. This explains how Spenser, who has been around for something on the order of 20 years, seems at most about 5 years older (physically/mentally) than he was when the series began. More amazing, however, is that Robert B. Parker seems to age at about the same rate! This latest Spenser has all the drive, wit, style, and (OK, the word choice is not the best) spunk of any of the best of the breed. Using a fictionsalized Enron-type corporation as his starting point, Parker gives us all the fun and ferocity that are the hallmark's of the series. To be sure, as with any series, Parker has his ups and downs, but, like the girl in the parody, when he is good he is very, very, good, and when he is bad he's terrific (well, better than most, anyway). This is one of his best.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Welcome back, Spenser and crew!
Review: This book comes close to vintage Spenser. He's based in Boston, not flying off to some desert town in Arizona. He brings back the gang: Hawk, Vinnie, Susan, and more.

Reading Bad Business means visiting these old friends. Like many of Parker's readers, they've become middle-aged and settled. (In a much earlier book, Spenser reluctantly dons reading glasses!) As a result, there's less room for character growth. Susan's a successful shrink, significant other and non-cook...just as she was in the last ten or so books. Hawk continues to be larger-than-life. Where can they go from here? Author Parker needs to give them some tough challenges to reveal new layers.

The plot of this novel has been amply described in editorial reviews as well as other customer reviews. I agree with those who question the financial elements of the plot, where Spenser is out of his element. He's much better when he can mete out his own version of justice.

However, Parker has managed to capture subtle aspects of corporate life with his usual wit, one beat away from satire. I've met CEO's just like Bob Cooper. Although they headed smaller companies, they put on a good show, demonstrated boundless enthusiasm even when they'd rather be eating mud, and kept their hands clean.

Even so, I wish Parker had focused more on the "growth seminars" and their aftermath. And I wish the villains had been more evil and less weasly. Nobody worth shooting here!

In my opinion, Early Autumn was Parker's all-time best book. You could read Early Autumn as a textbook of child and adolescent psychology. Other books showed Spenser's biting wit as he cut through conventions and pretentious displays. Plots were tighter and held more surprises.

Everybody's mellowed. Inevitable but Bad Business still held my attention more than most mysteries I read these days. And I'll be waiting for the next.


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