Orchid Blues (Holly Barker Series #2) by Stuart Woods

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(Hardcover)

  • Pub. Date: October 2001
  • 352pp
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: October 2001
    • Publisher: Penguin Group (USA)
    • Format: Hardcover, 352pp

    Synopsis

    Holly's wedding festivities are shattered-by murder-and Holly vows to find the culprits. With nothing to go on but the corpse of an innocent bystander, Holly discovers evidence that leads her into the midst of a clan whose members are as mysterious as they are zealous. Holly's father, Ham, a retired Army chief master sergeant, is her ticket into their strange world. What he finds there boggles the mind-and draws Holly, Ham, and Holly's Doberman Daisy into a whirlpool of crazed criminality from which even the FBI can't save them.

    Publishers Weekly

    This second thriller in the series Woods inaugurated with Orchid Beach starts with a bang a literal one. While series heroine Holly Barker, a former military police commander turned police chief of smalltown Orchid Beach, Fla., waits at the local courthouse to marry lawyer Jackson Oxenhandler, her fianc? gets himself killed in a shoot-out at Orchid Beach's bank. Once past this shocker of an opening, the thrills quickly deflate. Holly stifles a few sobs, gets back into uniform and sets off to track down the gunmen, a gang of highly organized robbers who planned to heist $4 million in payroll cash. It soon becomes clear that they aren't ordinary robbers, however, appearing to have some connection to a weird little town in a neighboring county, where the average resident is white, male and a gun nut. In the course of his meandering tale, Woods deepens his portraits of Holly and her father, Ham, a retired army noncom, and dog lovers should enjoy the antics of Daisy, the Doberman diva who is Holly's constant companion. Stone Barrington, the cop-turned-lawyer from such Woods bestsellers as L.A. Dead, makes a couple of important cameo appearances. But pages of lifeless dialogue and too much dead air in an already thin narrative eventually stifle most of the book's energy. Woods knows how law enforcement agencies from local cop shops to the Secret Service work, and his action scenes are clean and sharp. But in between there are a lot of empty spaces. 16-city author tour. (Nov.) Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.

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    Biography

    With 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.

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    Customer Reviews

    What happened....by Anonymous

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    November 21, 2002: I enjoyed all the Stone Barrington novels,but was disappointed with his new character Holly Barker. I found the relationship with her father hard to believe, who discusses their sex life with their parents! Also, much slower than the Barrington novels.

    another winner from Woodsby Anonymous

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    November 01, 2002: I have been a fan of Stuart Woods for quite some time now and still get excited when I see a new title by him. He does a stupendous job of creating characters that the reader can easily associate with, and instantly care about. This remains true for Holly Barker and her father Ham. I've read some other reviews that credited Woods' use of previously existing characters to populate his newer titles. I must commend him on this practice as well. Stone Barrington pops up in Orchid Blues, only briefly and with limited plot importance, to give a familiarity to this novel and its setting. As always, I greatly enjoyed Woods style and choice of settings. His knowledge of technology is extensive, yet he explains it in layman's terms. My only criticism would be to provide better closure, or perhaps explanation, on the relationship between the heroine Holly and her FBI friend Harry. Tensions and mistrust existed between them at the end and were never resolved. Otherwise an excellent read and great fun.


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