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Chuck Chandler has choked on more than one occasion--first as a pro tennis player at Wimbledon, then as a womanizing coach at posh tennis clubs around the country. Now at Key Westís Old Racquet Club, Chuck gets involved with the wrong married woman-the enticing Clare Carras, married to an enigmatic older man--and soon he is in way over his head. Enter Tommy Sculley, a retired New York homicide detective who has just joined the Key West force, and his young green partner, Daryl Haynes, who turns out to be smarter than he looks. Up to their necks in an investigation of a bizarre apparent homicide, the two detectives barely keep afloat in murky waters. Events take them from the Florida Keys to Los Angeles and back, as a plot emerges that involves not only the dangerous Clare, but a furious West Coast mob boss determined to get back what is his at any cost.
Chuck Chandler has choked on more than one occasion--first as a pro tennis player at Wimbledon, then as a womanizing coach at posh tennis clubs around the country. Now at Key West's Old Island Racquet Club, Chuck gets involved with the wrong married woman--the enticing Clare Carras, married to an enigmatic older man--and soon he is in way over his head. Simultaneous release with Wood's latest hardcover, Dirt.
Woods is a no-nonsense, slam-bang storyteller.
More Reviews and RecommendationsWith several successful mystery series going at once -- the most popular featuring jet-setting cop-turned-lawyer Stone Barrington -- Stuart Woods more than manages to keep focused on a bestselling streak that shows no signs of slowing down.
More About the AuthorReader Rating:
See Detailed Ratings
April 29, 2008: this is my favorite book from Stuart Woods. it was a fast read and kept me guessing until the last page.
Reader Rating:
See Detailed Ratings
May 20, 2002: Stuart Woods Choked is a well constructed page turning tale but a large part of the suspense would have disappeared had the two Key West detectives had simply checked Clare's phone records. Otherwise a believable and entertaining read.

Name:
Stuart Woods
Current Home:
Key West, Florida; Mt. Desert, Maine; New York, New York
Date of Birth:
January 09, 1938
Place of Birth:
Manchester, Georgia
Education:
B.A., University of Georgia, 1959
Awards:
Edgar Award for Chiefs, 1981; Grand Prix de Litérature Policière for Imperfect Strangers, 1995
Stuart Woods was born in 1938 in Manchester, Georgia. After graduating from college and enlisting in the Air National Guard, he moved to New York, where he worked in advertising for the better part of the 1960s. He spent three years in London working for various ad agencies, then moved to Ireland in 1973 to begin his writing career in earnest.
However, despite his best intentions, Woods got sidetracked in Ireland. He was nearly 100 pages into a novel when he discovered the seductive pleasures of sailing. "Everything went to hell," he quips on his web site "All I did was sail." He bought a boat, learned everything he could about celestial navigation, and competed in the Observer Singlehanded Transatlantic Race (OSTAR) in 1976, finishing respectably in the middle of the fleet. (Later, he took part in the infamous Fastnet Race of 1979, a yachting competition that ended tragically when a huge storm claimed the lives of 15 sailors and 4 observers. Woods and his crew emerged unharmed.)
Returning to the U.S., Woods wrote two nonfiction books: an account of his transatlantic sailing adventures (Blue Water, Green Skipper) and a travel guide he claims to have written on a whim. But the book that jump-started his career was the opus interruptus begun in Ireland. An absorbing multigenerational mystery set in a small southern town, Chiefs was published in 1981, went on to win an Edgar Award, and was subsequently turned into a television miniseries starring Charlton Heston.
An amazingly prolific author, Woods has gone on to pen dozens of compelling thrillers, juggling stand-alone novels with installments in four successful series. (His most popular protagonists are New York cop-turned-attorney Stone Barrington, introduced in 1991's New York Dead, and plucky Florida police chief Holly Barker, who debuted in 1998's Orchid Beach.) His pleasing mix of high-octane action, likable characters, and sly, subversive humor has made him a hit with readers -- who have returned the favor by propelling his books to the top of the bestseller lists.
Some fascinating facts about Stuart Woods:
His first job was in advertising at BBDO in New York, and his first assignment was to write ads for CBS-TV shows. He recalls: "They consisted of a drawing of the star and one line of exactly 127 characters, including spaces, and I had to write to that length. It taught me to be concise."
He flies his own airplane, a single-engine turboprop called a Jetprop, and tours the country every year in it, including book tours.
He's a partner in a 1929 motor yacht called Belle and spends two or three weeks a year aboard her.
In 1961-62, Woods spent 10 months in Germany with the National Guard at the height of the Berlin Wall Crisis.
In October and November of 1979, he skippered a friend's yacht back across the Atlantic, with a crew of six, calling at the Azores, Madeira, and the Canary Islands and finishing at Antigua in the Caribbean.
If you had a book club, what would it be reading -- and why?
Winston Churchill's Memoirs of the Second World War, because it is an extraordinary history, not only for the quality of the writing -- it won a Nobel for literature -- but because he lived it.
What are your favorite books to give -- and get -- as gifts?
Biographies.
Who are your favorite writers, and what makes their writing special?
John le Carré, because he is one of the best writers alive in the English language, and Elmore Leonard, because he writes better dialogue than anyone else.
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In the summer of 2004, we asked authors featured in Meet the Writers to give us a list of their all-time favorite summer reads, and tell us what makes them just right for the season. Here's what Stuart Woods had to say:
Chuck Chandler has choked on more than one occasion--first as a pro tennis player at Wimbledon, then as a womanizing coach at posh tennis clubs around the country. Now at Key Westís Old Racquet Club, Chuck gets involved with the wrong married woman-the enticing Clare Carras, married to an enigmatic older man--and soon he is in way over his head. Enter Tommy Sculley, a retired New York homicide detective who has just joined the Key West force, and his young green partner, Daryl Haynes, who turns out to be smarter than he looks. Up to their necks in an investigation of a bizarre apparent homicide, the two detectives barely keep afloat in murky waters. Events take them from the Florida Keys to Los Angeles and back, as a plot emerges that involves not only the dangerous Clare, but a furious West Coast mob boss determined to get back what is his at any cost.
Woods is a no-nonsense, slam-bang storyteller.
A real page-turner with surprises along the way.
Woods knows how to keep the narrative pace in overdrive...An entertaining page-turner.
Woods is a no-nonsense, slam-bang storyteller.
Loading...Wimbledon Early Seventies
Chuck won the point, won the game. He sat down at courtside, picked up a towel, mopped, then reached into his bag for a dry shirt.
Bud: Well, Dan, young Chuck Chandler has come a long way in this tournament.
Dan: I'll say he has, Bud. Coming into Wimbledon, this boy was ranked number one hundred in the world. He started strong, then clawed his way up through the seeds, defeating two former champions along the way, and now he stands at the threshold of a whole new career. Would you say that, Cynthia?
Cynthia: I certainly would, Dan. This young man has the talent to beat anybody when he's playing this well, and the charm and looks to become a new matinee idol of tennis for the young female spectators. Off the court he handles himself with the kind of assurance that we have only just begun to see on the court at this Wimbledon.
Bud: And now Chuck Chandler has the reigning champion tied at two sets all and down five games to four, and he's just about to go out there and serve for the greatest of all tennis championships.
Chuck slipped into the clean shirt. He wanted to be cool and dry when he accepted the gold trophy from the duchess, smiling for the cameras, basking in the glow of his new fame. He thought ahead to the ball that night. He'd be dancing with the women's champion, pressing his crotch into hers, as he had the night before in her hotel room. They'd make quite a pair for the press, "the dark-haired eighteen-year-old beauty and the handsome, golden twenty-two-year-old who came from nowhere to win Wimbledon." That's what the press would be saying.
"Mr. Chandler?"
Chuck jerked backto the present.
"Mr. Chandler," the umpire said, "would you please take the court?"
Chuck strode out to the baseline to a swelling roar of approval from the crowd. They had loved him from the moment he had defeated the first former champion in the first round, and now they showed it to the fullest. Chuck flashed his perfect teeth at them. They roared anew.
He accepted three balls on his racquet from the ball boy, tossed away the fuzziest, and tucked one into a pocket. He positioned himself at the baseline, looked down the court at the waiting champion, began his backswing, tossed the ball, and slammed an ace down the centerline.
The crowd went wild.
"Fifteen-love," the umpire said over the loudspeaker.
Chuck walked to the opposite side of the court, positioned himself, and sent another serve straight down the centerline at 125 miles an hour.
The crowd went nuts.
"Thirty-love," the umpire announced.
Chuck accepted balls from the ball boy, took his place, and this time, just for variety, slammed his first serve into his opponent's forehand corner for a third ace.
The crowd went berserk.
"Forty-love," the umpire announced.
Bud: Well, now. Young Chuck Chandler is standing on this court with three match points in his pocket and a very shaken champion staring helplessly back at him. Let's see if he can put this championship away with the next serve.
Chuck thought about the Porsche Cabriolet he had seen in the showroom in New York. His first phone call after this match would be to the salesman, whose card was in the pocket of his tennis shorts. He'd call from the dressing room, before he even got into a shower.
"Mr. Chandler?" the umpire said.
Chuck snapped back. The crowd chuckled.
Dan: Dreaming of glory, no doubt.
Bud: Who could blame him?
Chuck served with all his power. The ball slapped against the tape at the top of the net and fell back into his court.
A groan from the crowd.
Chuck served again. The ball struck the net again.
A noise of pure misery from the crowd.
"Forty-fifteen," the umpire announced.
Dan: Well, I suppose he can afford a double fault at this point.
Bud: Remember, with double faults it's not how often, it's when.
Chuck felt a swell of anger at himself. He'd let his concentration wander, and he had to settle down and think. He walked to the other side of the court and served again, straight into the net.
A sound of shock from the crowd.
Chuck took a deep breath and served again without delay. The ball struck the tape and died.
A worried, almost angry murmur rose from the crowd.
"Forty-thirty," the umpire announced. "Quiet please, ladies and gentlemen."
Bud: That's two wasted match points, and he's only got one left. Can Chuck do it?
Dan: We're about to find out.
Suddenly Chuck's fresh shirt was soaked. He wiped the sweat from his eyes and glanced down the court at the champion. Was that a small smile on the bastard's face? His heart seemed to be beating irregularly. I'll do this one by the numbers, he thought. Foot pointed at the netpost, feet a shoulder's width apart, racquet held for a flat, hard serve, straight-armed toss, mighty swing. The ball hit the tape and bounced off the court.
The crowd gasped.
Dan: This is difficult to believe, Bud. For a player who has comethis far to put five consecutive serves into the net is absolutely astonishing.
Bud: I'm speechless, Dan. Chuck is still at match point, though; let's see if he can pull this one out.
Chuck stood, sweat pouring down his face into his eyes.
"Second service, please, Mr. Chandler," the umpire said, not without sympathy.
There could be no second serve in this position; he had to pull just one more ace out of the hat. He walked to courtside, picked up a towel, wiped his face, and returned to the baseline. By the time he arrived the sweat was in his eyes again.
Please, God. He set himself up, taking his time, tossed the ball, and put his last match point unerringly into the net.
The crowd was absolutely silent.
"Deuce," the umpire said.
Twenty-four minutes later in the dressing room, Chuck knelt before the porcelain throne and puked his guts out. He had lost the next two points; he had lost the next two games; he had lost the Wimbledon championship. He had lost the best opportunity a boy ever had to become a hero.
He had lost more than he knew.
Dan: Bud, what happened out there on the center court?
Bud: There can be only one explanation, Dan, just one. Chuck choked.
Chuck woke in a sweat, his heart pounding as hard as it had twenty-odd years before. The Wimbledon dream was back. The brass clock on the bulkhead said 9:20, and he was starting his new job at 10:00. He dove into the boat's tiny shower and sluiced away the sweat.
At a quarter to ten, freshly shaved and dressed in clean whites, he stepped ashore at Key West Bight, the racquet bag in his hand and the sunglasses perched on top of his blond head. He looked around him. It was a pretty odd collection of vessels compared to the marina at Palm Beach. There were sightseeing catamarans, a large schooner or two for the more traditional-minded tourists, and a weird submarinelike vessel, along with the usual assortment of fishing boats and live-aboard yachts.
His own boat was a thirty-two-foot twin-screw motor yacht that had been custom-built in the fifties at an old-line yard in Maine. He had lived aboard her for nearly three years, since the time when he had had to choose between the condo and the boat. The condo had never had a chance. He worked hard at keeping the boat beautiful, and she rewarded the effort. Her black hull was unmarked, her mahogany trim was bright, and her teak decks were clean and well oiled.
She was named Choke. He preferred to make the joke himself, before somebody else brought it up, as somebody always did.
He'd have to rig up the gangplank, he thought, looking at the three-foot gap between the boat's stern and the concrete wharf. The women wouldn't like making that jump.
He walked to the parking lot and stopped in his tracks. The car was a late-fifties Porsche Speedster, bright yellow, restored to a fault, and her radio antenna had been snapped off by some passing sonofabitch. Chuck sighed. He wasn't in Palm Beach anymore.
He got into the car and drove the length of the island to the Olde Island Racquet Club, three courts and a tiny pro shop, owned by the big hotel across the street. He walked in at the stroke of ten.
Merkle Connor looked up from his computer and peered at Chuck. "Oh, hi," he said. "That's right, you're starting today." He seemed to have forgotten.
"That's right, Merk," Chuck said, offering his new boss a smile.
"Sit down a minute, Chuck," Merk said, pushing back from his desk in the tiny office and moving a crate of tennis balls away from the spare chair.
Chuck took a seat. Here it came.
"Let me give you the lay of the land," Merk said.
This is not Palm Beach, Chuck predicted.
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