Home :: Books :: Mystery & Thrillers  

Arts & Photography
Audio CDs
Audiocassettes
Biographies & Memoirs
Business & Investing
Children's Books
Christianity
Comics & Graphic Novels
Computers & Internet
Cooking, Food & Wine
Entertainment
Gay & Lesbian
Health, Mind & Body
History
Home & Garden
Horror
Literature & Fiction
Mystery & Thrillers

Nonfiction
Outdoors & Nature
Parenting & Families
Professional & Technical
Reference
Religion & Spirituality
Romance
Science
Science Fiction & Fantasy
Sports
Teens
Travel
Women's Fiction
Twelve Mile Limit

Twelve Mile Limit

List Price: $6.99
Your Price: $6.29
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 2 3 >>

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Reader from Kansas City
Review: I picked up Twelve Mile Limit while vacationing on Sanibel Island, on the advise of the owner of a terrific book shop on the island. It was my first Randy Wayne White book, and I had a very hard time putting it down. Since I was on Sanibel while reading, it was wonderful to eat at a particular restaurant and then see it included in the book. A terrific beach read and fully enjoyable.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Reader from Kansas City
Review: I picked up Twelve Mile Limit while vacationing on Sanibel Island, on the advise of the owner of a terrific book shop on the island. It was my first Randy Wayne White book, and I had a very hard time putting it down. Since I was on Sanibel while reading, it was wonderful to eat at a particular restaurant and then see it included in the book. A terrific beach read and fully enjoyable.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A WONDERFUL THRILLER!
Review: I've just finished TWELVE MILE LIMIT and it is, without a doubt one of the best thrillers I've read this decade, probably in my life. I loved the characters, the action's nonstop, and Randy Wayne White describes the sea and South American rain forest as well or better than anyone ever has. He has pushed the envelope of genre fiction, elevating it, at times, to literature. (I could have used a little less info about weaponry, and a few less digressions, but I'm quibbling.)
The book is based on a true story. Mr. White has done his research, and it shows. On a moonless might in November, 1994, a 26-foot boat sank to the bottom of the
Gulf of Mexico, setting four SCUBA divers adrift, all wearing wetsuits and inflated vests. Only one survived; the fate of the other three remains a mystery.
White fictionalizes this story, yet the drama still holds, in the best Doc Ford novel yet. One of the missing is Doc's buddy, Janet Mueller, and his marina community mobilizes to search for the missing divers with the help of the lone survivor, Amelia Gardner. Doc discovers
that Amelia's companions might have lived through their nightmare at sea, and he and Amelia follow the trail to Colombia. The conclusion left me delighted, satisfied, teary-eyed and exhausted. It is the longest of the Ford novels, but I finished it in all-day stretch, and didn't get to bed until 4 a.m. Even then I couldn't sleep. Whew. What a read! More Ford, please. Terese H. South Florida

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Doc's Flea Market
Review: If you like Doc Ford, you'll love this one, he is the absolute center of the novel. It includes an attractive lawyer, a disaster and rescue at sea, Dinkin's Bay parties, Coast Guard lore, drunken bigshot actors, dog fights, drug/people smugglers, wicked Columbians, a large Albino, mysterious mid-easterners, an I.R.A. bomber on the run, headhunters, paid (by some government) assasins, midnight raids, a jungle adventure and count em, four different women in the sack with Doc. Travis had nothing on Doc. This novel is like those Miami area flea markets in converted malls: something for everyone and everything for someone.

There is less interaction with Tomlinson than usual; and although she makes a token visit, White's newly introduced character of Doc's "sister" (cousin) is not as extensive a part of the plot as might be expected.

Despite this White manages to keep his plot moving. Part of the skill, as he admits in an epilogue, is the reliance on factual situations. Anyone who has written effective narrative has relied on a string of events, mixed and reattached, but derived some way from reality.

In the novel's climax, as Doc confronts/assists a special forces operative who has become a force in the jungle, echoes of Kurtz and Marlow appear. But the situation is like that in the classic film "The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance." Justification of extreme force to protect the innocent, even in the face of law, is and has been an important philosophical problem, closely akin to the place of evil in the world. White deliberately raises the point of EVIL. There is no doubt that such actions as Doc takes are requisite socially, but what are the personal consequences; what kind of man does such deeds?

Just in case this seems too dour, the concluding event will become a comic classic in the tales of surveillance.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Doc's Flea Market
Review: If you like Doc Ford, you'll love this one, he is the absolute center of the novel. It includes an attractive lawyer, a disaster and rescue at sea, Dinkin's Bay parties, Coast Guard lore, drunken bigshot actors, dog fights, drug/people smugglers, wicked Columbians, a large Albino, mysterious mid-easterners, an I.R.A. bomber on the run, headhunters, paid (by some government) assasins, midnight raids, a jungle adventure and count em, four different women in the sack with Doc. Travis had nothing on Doc. This novel is like those Miami area flea markets in converted malls: something for everyone and everything for someone.

There is less interaction with Tomlinson than usual; and although she makes a token visit, White's newly introduced character of Doc's "sister" (cousin) is not as extensive a part of the plot as might be expected.

Despite this White manages to keep his plot moving. Part of the skill, as he admits in an epilogue, is the reliance on factual situations. Anyone who has written effective narrative has relied on a string of events, mixed and reattached, but derived some way from reality.

In the novel's climax, as Doc confronts/assists a special forces operative who has become a force in the jungle, echoes of Kurtz and Marlow appear. But the situation is like that in the classic film "The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance." Justification of extreme force to protect the innocent, even in the face of law, is and has been an important philosophical problem, closely akin to the place of evil in the world. White deliberately raises the point of EVIL. There is no doubt that such actions as Doc takes are requisite socially, but what are the personal consequences; what kind of man does such deeds?

Just in case this seems too dour, the concluding event will become a comic classic in the tales of surveillance.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Twelve Mile Limit
Review: One of White's best. I hated to finish the book. Great characters and locales. The research involved in all phases of constructing this novel must have been tremendous. Am anxiously awaiting his next book.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: An Outstanding Entry in the Series
Review: Randy Wayne White returns to good form with this story from the Doc Ford series. I was somewhat disappointed by last year's Shark River and did not believe that it lived up the the quality of past books. Twelve Mile Limit really delivers though. Once I started, I couldn't put it down. White acheives a good balance of education, philosophy, introspection and action. The author seems to have taken the issues of the book to heart. He is right on in identifying where the real risks to America lie. I can't wait until the next Doc Ford novel. Let's hope the series is at least as long as Travis McGee.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Great Entry
Review: The author has another great entry in his "Doc Ford" series,
and this one is hard to put down.
He explores a complex set of factors in putting forth this
mystery, including his favorite, the environment, as well as
the more familiar man-woman emotional relationships, and the continuing US difficulty with illegal drugs. The interesting
story takes us from a warm home on the coast of Florida, to a
wreck 50 miles away, and then on to the brutal, harsh country
of Columbia.
The hero, Ford, meets the usual array of quirky and interesting
characters, and we know he is going to have a tough time
meeting his objectives.
The story, which the author says is based, loosely, on a true
story about some missing divers, concerns Ford's search for a
good friend who is first thought to be dead in a diving accident, but who Ford later, using some super-secret info from
friendly government operatives, concludes has been captured by
"white-slavers" and taken into captivity. Ford will spare no
effort, of course, and he encounters dangers almost too numerous
to list in his search.
And he has help from a couple interesting friends, and they
plunge headlong into an adventure most of us will like to share
only in book form.
The S. Florida boating and fishing scene is not presented
better by anyone, and a thoughtful reader will almost be swaying
to the breeze rocking a boat as this adventure is absorbed.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: The places you'll go
Review: The best Doc Ford yet, educates and inspires and the pages keep turning. A "Heart of Darkness" twist allows Ford some self-examination in the heart of the Colombian jungle. Mixing fact and fiction, this is the strongest entry in the series. Keep up the good work. Headhunters and broken hearts.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: A disappointing Doc Ford
Review: This book is a "Formula Ford" - same old plot, and I'm beginning to think that Ford is really promiscuous. If you like loads of detail about GPS, ocean tidal movement, and other minutiae, this is for you. The plot gets too bogged down and hard to follow, but Mr. White's vocabulary continues to impress. I will probably pass on the next one.


<< 1 2 3 >>

© 2004, ReviewFocus or its affiliates