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Widow's Walk

Widow's Walk

List Price: $24.95
Your Price: $7.99
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Widow's Walk
Review: "Widow's Walk" is the 29th Spenser novel by Robert B. Parker. I look forward to getting his Spenser novels each Spring. Mary Smith is charged with the murder of her rich husband, Nathan Smith who was murdered in his bed. It appears that the only other person in the house was Mary. Mary claims that she was watching TV at the time. Parker does a great job with her character; Mary isn't very intelligent to say the least. Spenser begins to investigate and finds that someone doesn't want him on the case at all. He is followed, then someone tries to kill him. Then, other people involved in the case are found dead. Spenser is stumped until the very end. Spenser is back in Boston for this one after being in Georgia and Arizona for the last 2 books. I think this is an excellent addition to this long-running PI series.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The Boston Red Sox of Private Cops
Review: Decades ago with his GODWULF MANUSCRIPT, Robert B. Parker largely reinvented the mystery sub-genre of the tough-guy private eye novel. He showed us all how to update this traditional American prototypical character for today's sensibilities, and Parker's Spenser has earned a place among the most popular of our age's PIs.

As does his beloved Red Sox, Parker sends a fresh Spenser mystery onto the field of play every year. Each spring, Spenser seems like a championship creation. Every novel is consistently thrilling, witty, unpredictable, and, in the end, a bit heartbreaking. This series is obviously written by a Red Sox fan. One knows when they begin that in the end all will not be idyllic.

WIDOW'S WALK fits this Spenser mold perfectly. Parker is amazingly consistent. In this novel, Spenser is hired by Rita Fiore (an series semi-regular)to help build her defense for her client Mary Smith. Mary's husband, Nathan, of Mayflower lineage, is murdered. Mary, his much younger and terribly unfaithful, widow is everyone's, including Rita's, favorite suspect.

Spenser springs into action. Pearl the Wonder Dog is on hand. Susan is here, and, of course, so is Hawk. WIDOW'S WALK has all we have grown to expect from Parker's series. The witty dialog snaps rapidly throughout. Parker's social observations are astute. The true origin of the crime rests with a real estate scam. As one reads WIDOW'S WALK, one has to hope that this year the Red Sox will actually find a way to win the World Series in October. The last time Parker's team won it, the Series was played in September.

WIDOW'S WALK is an excellent novel.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Unfortunately, not a great introduction to Robert Parker
Review: I picked up Widow's Walk from the library, to listen to while I commuted to work. This was my introduction to Robert B. Parker and as such, also to Spenser.

Joe Mantegna reads very well for the characters and manages to convey very believable characters. As I listened, my imagination played some film noir soundtrack in the background.

There are a great many characters in the storyline. At one point I almost lost track of who was whom. And golly, everyone but the main characters seemed to die. It was as if they were all cursed with a Red Uniform from the original Star Trek days. And I think Parker seemed to concentrate more on having them dead than fleshing out the reasons or the writing behind the reasons for their deaths. The reasons just didn't seem to want to stick in my head. That felt unsatisfying.

All else considered, Widow's Walk was good for light reading, or listening, as the case was for me, but it wasn't exactly material that made me enthused about returning for another dose of Parker. I don't dislike his writing; it was just.. okay. It wasn't until I read the other Amazon readers' reviews for Widow's Walk that I figured I ought to give the earlier Spensers a go.


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