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(Mass Market Paperback - Reprint)
Average Customer Rating:
(8 ratings)
Cop-turned-investigator Stone Barrington returns in this eighth adventure following his biggest New York Times bestseller yet, last season's Cold Paradise.
Stone's new client, John Bartholomew, asks Stone to fly to London in search of a young woman whom he suspects has taken up with a mysterious character. Bartholomew asks Stone to see what he can find to discredit the man, Cabot, which seems a simple enough task, and Stone is eager to spend time in London and with his friend Sarah Buckminster. What Stone finds is more bizarre than he had expected. The woman in question isn't related to Bartholomew in quite the way he had implied. And it appears that Bartholomew and Cabot, who once worked together on a secretive assignment, now have very different versions of what went wrong. When Stone himself is implicated in a shocking double murder, he and his partner, Dino, know they have stepped into a strange case unlike any other.
Woods's effortless,crisp writing and nimbly staged action make this a breezy read.
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 Author
Number of Reviews: 8
Average Rating:
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Write a Review
A good book
A reviewer
(CANIGHT@aol.com)
, A reviewer, 02/20/2005
Woods'main character becomes very addictive. I really liked this book and enjoyed the relationship he developed with Lance. I think this is the sixth Stone Barrington book I have read and I have enjoy them all.
Also recommended: Dirt, Dirty Work, Reckless Abandonment
The 24 hour book!
A reviewer, A reviewer, 01/20/2005
I am an avid reader and get bored easily. Stuart Woods is the best. I read this book in 24 hours and could not put it down. Boy! have I found a new author. Thanks Stuart Woods.
Also recommended: All Dan Silva's work Dan Brown's work and In Agony and In Ectasy
More Customer Reviews
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:
Stuart Woods’s suave, globetrotting cop-turned-lawyer, Stone Barrington, is back in this topsy-turvy caper involving false identity, a suspicious boating accident, a couple of ex-girlfriends, and plenty of red herrings.
Cop-turned-investigator Stone Barrington returns in this eighth adventure following his biggest New York Times bestseller yet, last season's Cold Paradise.
Stone's new client, John Bartholomew, asks Stone to fly to London in search of a young woman whom he suspects has taken up with a mysterious character. Bartholomew asks Stone to see what he can find to discredit the man, Cabot, which seems a simple enough task, and Stone is eager to spend time in London and with his friend Sarah Buckminster. What Stone finds is more bizarre than he had expected. The woman in question isn't related to Bartholomew in quite the way he had implied. And it appears that Bartholomew and Cabot, who once worked together on a secretive assignment, now have very different versions of what went wrong. When Stone himself is implicated in a shocking double murder, he and his partner, Dino, know they have stepped into a strange case unlike any other.
Woods's effortless,crisp writing and nimbly staged action make this a breezy read.
In recent Woods bestsellers like Cold Paradise, N.Y.P.D. detective-turned-PI Stone Barrington has gone upscale in lifestyle, international in expertise. This time, mogul John Bartholomew hires Stone to fly to London and persuade his niece, Erica, to leave her cocaine-smuggling boyfriend, Lance Cabot, and to make sure Lance winds up in jail. Dapper Stone charms Erica, who offers to set him up with her sister, Monica, and then introduces him to Lance. With help from two British investigators, Stone learns John Bartholomew is not who he seems: not only is he not Erica's uncle, he's really CIA biggie Stan Hedger. Confronted, Stan owns up, revealing that Lance is an ex-CIA agent who blew ops, ran with cash and nearly killed him. Meanwhile, Monica asks Stone to a country weekend with Lance and Erica at what turns out to be the manse of his old flame, Sarah Buckminster, who previously dodged a New York bombing and is now engaged to a megatycoon. The fog thickens when Stone's N.Y.P.D. pal Dino Bacchetti flies over to smooth out the beating death of one of Stone's investigators and Scotland Yard brings in MI6, who suspect Lance is after a top-secret military device for a Mideast client. Woods may have left behind the police action of L.A. Dead, but he churns up plenty of conflict and twisted plotting in this speedy tale. Several bombshell revelations and multiple resolutions combine with the cinematic plot for a perfect flight or beach read. Agents, Morton Janklow and Anne Sibbald. (Apr.) Forecast: Though some fans miss the more rugged Stone of earlier novels, Woods is eternally in bestseller mode and this title should be no exception. Major ad/promo; author tour; Putnam Berkley audio. Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information.
Woods's recurring hero, former NYPD detective and now private investigator/lawyer Stone Barrington, has been hired by the mysterious John Bartholomew to go to London to find his niece. Apparently the beautiful twentysomething Erica is in a relationship with alleged cocaine smuggler Lance Cabot. Not only does Stone find the girl, he discovers that she is not John's niece. With the aid of a couple of local London P.I.s and a contact back in the states, Stone finds that John is really a former CIA bigwig and that Lance, too, is a former agent who went astray, fleeing with money that wasn't his in an operation in which both men were involved. Woods's plots and subplots are well developed into a good story that holds the listener's interest. Robert Lawrence's narration and well-done British accents add to the entertainment; a good addition to mystery collections.-Steven J. Mayover, formerly with Free Lib. of Philadelphia Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information.
Hours after his latest lover dumps him, that paragon of lawyer/adventurers Stone Barrington (Cold Paradise, 2001, etc.) is en route to London for a round of intrigue that does indeed seem to go on forever. Stone's charge is simple: to rescue John Bartholomew's niece, Erica Burroughs, from the clutches of drug mule Lance Cabot and get Cabot arrested for something or other before Stone returns to the US with Erica. But the job is complicated by the fact that John Bartholomew doesn't exist and Erica Burroughs (who's soon fixed Stone up with her eligible sister Monica) doesn't have an uncle. Even murkier waters open when the sisters take Stone to a house party at the home of painter Sarah Buckminster, another of his inexhaustible supply of ex-lovers, and he's on hand to see Sarah's fiance, wine trader James Cutler, fall to his death from her yacht. Or did Sarah, overenthusiastic at Stone's return, really arrange his demise? Just when you think the story's settled into a mystery mold, Woods changes course again, like a kindergartner with a short attention span, and drops Stone into the middle of the mutual recriminations of Bartholomew and Cabot, each of whom insists the other is a ruthless criminal spy (and there's evidence they both may be right). To the smorgasbord of plotlines already on display - Bring Home the Lady, Did She or Didn't She, and Who Do You Trust-Woods eventually adds a fourth when Cabot inveigles Stone into a fast-money scheme to smuggle an unnamed McGuffin out of its closely guarded industrial home and into the hands of international provocateurs. Seasoned fans will know better than to take the spy stuff any more seriously than the rest of this potluck supper. Woods notes inclosing that his editor requested no changes in his manuscript, since nothing needed fixing. Readers may well come up with other explanations.
Number of Reviews: 8
Average Rating:
![]()
Write a Review
A good book
A reviewer (CANIGHT@aol.com), A reviewer, 02/20/2005
Woods'main character becomes very addictive. I really liked this book and enjoyed the relationship he developed with Lance. I think this is the sixth Stone Barrington book I have read and I have enjoy them all.
Also recommended: Dirt, Dirty Work, Reckless Abandonment
The 24 hour book!
A reviewer, A reviewer, 01/20/2005
I am an avid reader and get bored easily. Stuart Woods is the best. I read this book in 24 hours and could not put it down. Boy! have I found a new author. Thanks Stuart Woods.
Also recommended: All Dan Silva's work Dan Brown's work and In Agony and In Ectasy
Stuart Woods keeps Barrington fresh
A reviewer, mystery novel and movie fanatic, 01/18/2005
It must be so difficult to keep a series going. Stuart Woods some how has the formula and keeps it going. What makes it even better is that the protagonist grows as the novels keep coming. It really feels like Woods is his biographer. The Short Forever shows Barrington's vulnerability for companionship as he investigates a thrilling mystery putting his life in jeopardy. A must read for all Barrington fans.
Stuart Woods another hit!!!
Rita Stone-Conwell (rita51@nycap.rr.com), an avid reader., 09/22/2003
Stuart Woods was a new author to me and again I am hooked. The character of Stone Barrington is terrific. Stone begins his career as a policeman but becomes a New York State lawyer. Clients draw him into one breathless mystery after another. The twists and turns keeps the reader turning page after page. His partner on the force, Dino, appears as his constant sidekick and reminder to stay inside the law when solving cases. Some clients appear in a second book but don't let that stop you from reading. Each book is a completed case filled with murder, intrigue, sex and excitement. The following is the list of how the Stone Barrington books were released: New York Dead: Dirt, Dead In The Water, Swimming On Catalina, Worst Fears Realized, LA Dead, Cold Paradise, The Short Forever and Dirty Work. Be sure and search out the other books written by Stuart Wood and his other stars of fiction.
Also recommended: JD Robb (Nora Roberts) 'Death' series staring Lt. Eve Dallas and Rourke.
Too Short
BJE, book worm...now, 04/15/2003
This was the best book I ever read. I was sorry to have to finish the last page, and now I have to wait a whole week for another one!
Also recommended: THE RUN DIRTY
Showing 1-5 Next
Elaines late.
Stone Barrington sipped his third Wild Turkey and resisted the basket of hot sourdough bread that the waiter had just placed on the table. Callie was to have been there an hour and a half ago, and he was very, very hungry. Shed called from the airport to say that she was on the ground and on her way, but that had been an hour ago. It just didnt take that long to get to Elaines from Teterboro Airport, where her bosss jet landed. He glanced at his watch: Hed give her another three minutes, and then he was ordering.
He had been looking forward to seeing her. Theyd spent some very pleasant time together in Palm Beach a few months before, on the yacht of his client Thad Shames. She was Shamess majordomoassistant, cook, social secretary, whatever he neededand she moved when Shames moved, back and forth between Palm Beach and New York. In New York, she had been living with Stone, and he missed her when she was away.
Give me a menu, Stone said to Michael, the headwaiter. Giving up on her? Michael asked.
I am. If I drink any more without some food in my stomach, youre going to have to send me home in a wheelbarrow.
Michael laughed and placed a menu before him. Dinos not coming? He should be here in a while; he said he had to work late. He opened the menu, and Michael stood ready, pad in hand. When Stone was this hungry, everything looked good. Hed meant to have fish; hed gained three pounds, and he need to get it off, but now he was too hungry.Ill have a Caesar salad and the osso buco, he said, and a bottle of the Amerone.
Michael jotted down the order, and as he reached for the menu, Stone looked up to see Callie breezing through the front door. He rose to meet her. She looked wonderful, as usual, in an Armani pantsuit. She gave him a short, dry kiss and sat down.
Id given up on you, Stone said. I just ordered. Michael handed her a menu, but she handed it back. Im sorry, I cant stay for dinner, she said.
Stone looked at her, stupefied. She had kept him waiting for an hour and a half, and now she wasnt going to have dinner?
Would you like a drink, Callie? Michael asked. She shook her head. No time, Michael.
You still want dinner, Stone? Yes, please, Stone replied. Michael retreated.
So? Stone asked. So what? Callie replied. Is there something you want to tell me? He wanted an apology and an explanation, but he got neither.
Stone, Callie said, looking at the tablecloth and playing with a matchbook. She didnt continue.
Im right here, he replied. Have been, for an hour and a half. God, this is hard, she said.
Maybe a drink would help. No, I dont have the time. Where do you have to be at this hour? he asked. Back in Palm Beach.
Stone wasnt terribly surprised. Thad Shames, a computer software billionaire, had a peripatetic lifestyle, and Callie was, after all, at his beck and call.
First of all, Im sorry Im late, she said. I had to go by the house and pick up some things.
Stone looked around; she wasnt carrying anything. Theyre in the car, she said.
What did you have to pick up? he asked. Some things. My things.
Stone blinked. Are you going somewhere? Back to Palm Beach. I told you.
Stone was baffled. Callie ... She took a deep breath and interrupted him. Thad and I are getting married this weekend.
Stone was drinking his bourbon, and he choked on it. I know you didnt expect this, she said. For that matter, neither did I. Its just happened the past couple of weeks. She had been gone for two weeks on this last trip.
Stone recovered his voice. Are you perfectly serious about this? Perfectly, and Id appreciate it if you didnt try to talk me out of it. That was exactly what he wanted to try. I wouldnt dream of it, he said. If thats what you want.
Its good, Stone. It isnt like with you and me, but that could never last.
Why not? Stone demanded, stung. Oh, its been great. I arrive in town, move in with you; we go to Elaines and the theater, and around. We fuck our brains out for a week or two, then I go back.
That was exactly what they did, he reflected, but he wasnt going to admit it. I thought we had more than that going, he said.
Oh, men always think that, she said, exasperated. There are things Thad can give me, things I need, things you cant . . . She left it hanging.
Cant afford? he asked. I live pretty well. Of course, Im not worth five billion dollars, but I didnt think Thad was, anymore, not after his new stock offering collapsed, and with the way the market has been.
Its true, she said. Thad was hurt badly. Now hes only worth three billion.
What a blow, Stone said. Its not the money, she said. All right, maybe thats part of it. God knows, Ill never have to draw another anxious breath.
Not about money, anyway. Wont you try and understand? What is there to understand? Im out, Thads in. Its your life; I cant tell you how to live it.
If only youd . . . She stopped. Stone didnt want to hear the rest, anyway. I think its a little late for if only, he said. Clearly, youve thought this out, Im not going to try to talk you out of it.
Thank God for that, she muttered, half to herself. They sat silently for a moment, then, without another word, Callie got up and headed for the door, nearly knocking down Dino, who had chosen that moment to walk in.
Dino turned and watched her rush out the door, then he walked over to Stones table and sat down. Dino Bacchetti had been Stones partner when he was still on the NYPD; now he ran the detective squad at the Nineteenth Precinct. So, he said, I see you managed to fuck up another relationship.
Jesus, Dino, I didnt do anything, Stone said. Dino motioned to Michael for a drink. Thats usually the problem, he said. The drink was placed before him, and he sipped it.
You want some dinner, Dino? Michael asked. Whatever hes having, Dino replied. Caesar salad and the osso buco?
Good. He turned to Stone. After a while, women expect you to do something.
Shes marrying Thad Shames. Dinos eyebrows shot up. No shit? Well, Ill admit, I didnt see that one coming. I guess Thad isnt broke yet.
Not yet, but hes only worth three billion now. Poor guy; couple months, hell be living on the street. Still, he got the girl.
Dont rub it in. Its what I do, Dino explained. Stones cellphone, clipped to his belt, began to vibrate. Now what? he said to nobody in particular. Hello?
Stone, its Bill Eggers. Bill was the managing partner of Wood-man & Weld, the prestigious law firm for which Stone did unprestigious jobs.
Yeah, Bill. You sound down. Just tired; whats up? You got anything heavy on your plate right now? Nothing much.
Good; theres a guy coming to see you tomorrow morning at nine, with some work. Do whatever he says.
Suppose he wants me to kill somebody. If this guy wanted somebody killed, hed do it himself. His name is John Bartholomew, and hes major, in his way.
Ill be glad to see him. You got a passport? Yes. Not that hed used it for a long time. Good. Youre going to need it. Eggers hung up. Elaine came over and pulled up a chair. Callie left in a hurry, she said. I guess you fucked it up again.
Dont you start, Stone said.
Excerpted from The Short Forever by Stuart Woods. Copyright © 2002 by Stuart Woods. Excerpted by permission. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
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