<< 1 >>
Rating: Summary: Too many coincidences to be believable. Review: I love Ms. Roberts' "Amanda Pepper" series, and I found Time and Trouble a disappointment. Neither Emma nor Billie were sympathetic or interesting. The balancing humor that appears in the prior series is missing here making the book too dark for my taste. I didn't think that Emma was very well drawn. Little was told about her except for giving her age and showing that she didn't get along with anyone. As for Billie, her home life is depressing and too often used in books, the woman struggling to find a job and support her child. If this series is to work for me, it will have to be a more pleasant read. Will I try the next in the series? Certainly, but I'm hoping that some of the wit of the prior series will come into this one. -- Pat Bird
Rating: Summary: Talk about an annoying protagonist! Review: I was so annoyed at this woman PI for her bad attitude about everything, including the young woman who at least had the gumption to care about the children involved in this case. Emma Howe is a 50 year old curmudgeon who cannot manage to keep employees. After reading this book, I can totally understand why no one wants to stick around! This type of mystery, having to do with child pornography, is not my cup of tea...but you had no idea what you were getting into until the last third of the book. I was thinking adult pornography or maybe shipping of drugs in upholstered furniture, but was disgusted to find out where it ended up. The plot was too forced, the characterization not up to my par at least, and the writing merely adequate. I take it Robert has written another series, but based on the reading of this book, I don't think I want to waste the time. Karen Sadler
Rating: Summary: Too many coincidences to be believable. Review: It's too bad Gillian Roberts wasn't more creative in starting this second series of mysteries. The premise of a veteran hard-bitten woman PI and the eager, beautiful young student isn't too bad. The three plot lines concerning an old mystery, a current kidnap, and an insurance investigation just overlap way too much to be believable or realistic.
Rating: Summary: A wonderful new mystery from Gillian Roberts. Review: This is a really enjoyable mystery from the author of the popular Amanda Pepper mystery series. "Time and Trouble" is darker, edgier, better written, and more tightly plotted than any of the Amanda Pepper books, and I hope this is the first in a new series from Roberts. Emma Howe is a crusty old P.I. whose unapologetically blunt demeanor repels her employees; she's gone through seven detective trainees in less than three years. Enter Billie August, a young, pretty single mom desperate for a steady income and a mental challenge. Theirs is a match made in hell--Billie's naive earnestness and Emma's been-there-done-that coldness bring out the worst in the other. After Billie botches her first case, their partnership seems doomed. Billie is given a second chance, however, when the Howe Agency is asked to locate a teenage runaway. Learning as she goes, Billie soon finds herself involved in something far more complex--and dangerous--than she imagined. These two characters are marvelous depicted; each is so distinctive, complex, and fully portrayed. The reader completely understands Emma's irritation with Billie and Billie's frustration with Emma--each person is so convinced the other is a big pain. Kudos to Roberts for creating a relationship that is so fresh and interesting. The plot is satisfyingly complex. Another reviewer complained of "coincidences," but I did not think these strained credulity. I read stranger things in the newspaper every day. I highly recommend this book and look forward to reading the next in the series.
Rating: Summary: A wonderful new mystery from Gillian Roberts. Review: This is a really enjoyable mystery from the author of the popular Amanda Pepper mystery series. "Time and Trouble" is darker, edgier, better written, and more tightly plotted than any of the Amanda Pepper books, and I hope this is the first in a new series from Roberts. Emma Howe is a crusty old P.I. whose unapologetically blunt demeanor repels her employees; she's gone through seven detective trainees in less than three years. Enter Billie August, a young, pretty single mom desperate for a steady income and a mental challenge. Theirs is a match made in hell--Billie's naive earnestness and Emma's been-there-done-that coldness bring out the worst in the other. After Billie botches her first case, their partnership seems doomed. Billie is given a second chance, however, when the Howe Agency is asked to locate a teenage runaway. Learning as she goes, Billie soon finds herself involved in something far more complex--and dangerous--than she imagined. These two characters are marvelous depicted; each is so distinctive, complex, and fully portrayed. The reader completely understands Emma's irritation with Billie and Billie's frustration with Emma--each person is so convinced the other is a big pain. Kudos to Roberts for creating a relationship that is so fresh and interesting. The plot is satisfyingly complex. Another reviewer complained of "coincidences," but I did not think these strained credulity. I read stranger things in the newspaper every day. I highly recommend this book and look forward to reading the next in the series.
<< 1 >>
|