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(Hardcover - Bargain)
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| Compact Disc - Unabridged, 5 CDs, 6 hours | $28.45 |
| MP3 Book - Unabridged | $13.23 |
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Hi, Phil,
You miss me? I got bored, so I thought I’d reestablish our relationship. Give us both something to do in our later years. Stay tuned.
Spare Change
When a serial murderer dubbed “The Spare Change Killer” by the Boston press surfaces after three decades in hiding, the police immediately seek out the cop, now retired, who headed the original task force: Phil Randall. As a sharp-eyed investigator and a doting parent, Phil calls on his daughter Sunny to help trap the criminal who eluded him so many years before.
When the killer strikes a second time, and a third, the murders take a macabre turn, as, eerily, the victims each resemble Sunny. While her father pressures her to drop the case, her need to create a trap to catch her killer grows. In a compelling game of cat-and-mouse, Sunny Randall uses all her skills to draw out her prey, realizing too late that she’s setting herself up to become the next victim.
Not all of Sunny Randall's cases have been personal, but this one, her sixth, raises the average. Her on-again, off-again romance with her ex-husband is on again in a big way. And she's working an investigation with her father, Phil, an ec-cop lured from retirement by a slayer using the same modus operandi (coins left on beautiful female corpses) as the serial killer he hunted 30 years before. Parker's snappy dialogue keeps the story moving along. Burton is too smart to let Sunny slip into girliness when she's chatting with her beloved dad or her ultraromantic ex-husband, and she never makes her too cute or too tough in her cat-and-mouse encounters with the man she's certain is the Spare Change Killer. Instead, Burton maintains Sunny's professional edge, using subtle shifts of phrasing or timing to indicate the emotions the sleuth is keeping under wraps. She is just as successful in finding the right voices for the other main characters: flirtatious and sinister for the prime suspect in pursuit of Sunny; and gruff frustration for Phil Randall, who is worried for his daughter's safety. Simultaneous release with the Putnam hardcover (Reviews, Apr. 9). (July)
Copyright 2007 Reed Business Information More Reviews and RecommendationsFeaturing rapid-fire dialogue and spicy characters, Robert B. Parker's books are top-shelf reading for fans of detective crime novels. His Spenser series is several titles strong and an established classic; lately Parker has raised the stakes with two additional series (one featuring private eye Sunny Randle, the other featuring police chief Jesse Stone) that may eventually rival his beloved Boston P.I.
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July 04, 2009: As a devoted reader of Robert B. Parker, I was disappointed in Spare Change. It was like eating Angel Food Cake. Parker set a trap for himself when he began mixing characters from his other series (Susan Silvermann, Jesse Stone, etc.) and now he has fallen into it with a sparse plot and sketchy outlines of characters we already know well. On the whole, this is a shallow effort. Given his dabbling with westerns (the Virgil Coles -- which I enjoy) maybe he's bored with Spenser, Jesse, and Sunny. Or maybe he's already written it all in his very rich and distinguished career. Hopefully, he will recover his stride in the future -- maybe with a plot that puts Richie on the bulls eye and does more to explore the depth of the relationship between Sunny and him.
I Also Recommend: The Monkey's Raincoat (Elvis Cole Series #1), Stalking the Angel (Elvis Cole Series #2), Lullaby Town (Elvis Cole Series #3), Free Fall (Elvis Cole Series #4), Stalking the Angel (Elvis Cole Series #2).
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June 26, 2009: I have read all the Jesse Stone novels and enjoyed them (as well as the tv movies). So I decided I'd pick up another Parker novel and try it, so I got the audio version of this book from my library. First of all, the narrator obviously hasn't spent much time around Boston and the accent wasn't good. I wish people would just read straight rather than try to affect an accent if they don't have the knack. Then, the plot. My gosh- there was nothing to try to figure out! It just went on and on. Don't believe I'll be reading any more of this guy (except Jesse Stone).