Rough Weather | 
enlarge | Author: Robert B. Parker Creator: Joe Mantegna Publisher: Random House Audio Category: Book
List Price: $29.95 Buy New: $16.77 You Save: $13.18 (44%)
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Avg. Customer Rating: 18 reviews Sales Rank: 15914
Format: Audiobook, Unabridged Media: Audio CD Edition: Unabridged Number Of Items: 5 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.4 Dimensions (in): 5.9 x 5 x 1.2
ISBN: 0739339982 Dewey Decimal Number: 813.54 EAN: 9780739339985 ASIN: 0739339982
Publication Date: October 7, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Condition: 100% Brand New! - Ships Today! Identical to Amazon's book in every way. Flawless! Not a cheap Remainder or Book Club Copy! *We recommend Expedited Shipping option for much faster mail delivery
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Product Description “Robert B. Parker is that rarity–a prolific author whose books are consistently original, suspenseful and fascinating. His crackling dialogue is always fresh and smart-alecky. You’re happily hooked before you know it.”-Forbes
Heidi Bradshaw is wealthy, beautiful, and well connected–and she needs Spenser’s help. In a most unlikely request, Heidi, a notorious gold digger recently separated from her latest husband, recruits the Boston P.I. to accompany her to her private island, Tashtego, for her daughter’s wedding. Spenser is unsure of what his role as personal bodyguard will entail, but he consents when it’s decided that he can bring his beloved Susan Silverman along.
It should be a straightforward job for Spenser: show up for appearances, have some drinks, and spend some quality time with Susan. Yet when his old nemesis Rugar–the Gray Man–arrives on Tashtego, Spenser realizes that something is amiss. With a hurricane-level storm brewing outside, the Gray Man jumps into action, firing fatal shots into the crowd of wedding guests and kidnapping the bride–but Spenser knows that the sloppy guns-for-hire abduction is not Rugar’s style. Unable to prevent the attack, Spenser will stop at nothing to recover the kidnapped bride and figure out how the Gray Man is connected. It’s up to Spenser to decide who the real enemy is . . . before more people end up dead.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 13 more reviews...
Quick read November 20, 2008 Robert Parker's books are always a priority for me. I pre-order them and can't wait for them to come. My only problem is that they are so funny and fast paced that I read them in less than a day or two and then I'm left wanting more of Spenser, Susan, Hawk and the other recurring characters. I recommend this book to anyone who likes comedic mysteries in the same genre of Janet Evanovich's Stephanie Plum novels. Get it read it and pass it along to someone else.
Rough Weather November 19, 2008 I always liked Parker's books. I though the book was good.I enjoy Spenser.
V. Nathan
Packs an explosive punch November 18, 2008 For many, fall is the season of falling leaves, shorter days and cooler nights. But for mystery fans, fall is the time of year for a new Spenser novel from the dean of American crime fiction, Robert B. Parker. ROUGH WEATHER is the 36th book featuring Spenser, the wise-cracking Boston detective whose first name we still have never discovered. Not that it matters at this point.
ROUGH WEATHER will not disappoint. The series is as fresh and pertinent now as it was when Parker published the first Spenser novel, THE GODWOLF MANUSCRIPT, in 1973. Indeed, in recent years, the series has taken a darker, more noir-like turn while still giving readers everything they have come to love and expect from Spenser: his wit, his strength, his sense of justice.
Parker did not come to the mystery writing business the traditional way. The pulps were long gone by the time he arrived, and he was not a newspaperman. Instead, he got a PhD in literature from Boston University. His dissertation studied the private eyes of an earlier age created by pulp giants like Dashiell Hammett and Raymond Chandler. These writers brought the private eye into 20th-century America. But Chandler's Philip Marlowe series consisted of just seven novels. Parker's Spenser series is now over five times longer than Chandler's. And in the process, Parker has taken the American private eye into the 21st century and created one of the greatest fictional characters in American literature.
The America of 2008 is far different from the America of 1973, but at the start of ROUGH WEATHER we find Spenser in his usual setting, staring out the window of his office at the young women walking by on Berkeley Street. And then the story kicks in. Parker writes:
"I was thinking about sex when there was a delicate knock on my door. Immediately after the knock, the door opened and a woman came in for whom I was in the perfect state of mind. She was a symphony of thick auburn hair, even features, wide mouth, big eyes, stunning figure, elegant clothes, expensive perfume, and what people who would talk that way would call breeding."
Chandler could not have written it better.
The mysterious woman, Heidi Bradshaw, hires Spenser to be her bodyguard at the wedding of her daughter, which will be held on a private island off the Massachusetts coast. The island has its own private security force, so it is not clear why she needs Spenser, except, she points out, "as a kind of balance to my insecurity." Spenser responds, "An insecurity guard."
Right from the start, the novel follows the noir credo that nothing is what it seems. And sure enough, a hurricane hits the island right as the wedding begins, which coincides as well with the arrival of a highly trained commando team that kills the groom and reverend at the altar and then kidnaps the bride. Spenser is in the first row with his longtime love, Dr. Susan Silverman. He manages to save Susan and kill one of the bad guys but not before the bride is whisked away as the storm lifts.
As if this was not bad enough, the lead kidnapper just happens to be the "Gray Man," the shadowy CIA-type operative who is the only one who ever came close to killing Spenser several years back. Why is he involved in a kidnapping? And the bride's father and stepfather have money, as does the groom, the heir to a pharmaceutical fortune. But after the bride is snatched, no ransom note appears. What kind of kidnapping is this?
Spenser is officially off the case, but that has never stopped him before --- and it does not stop him now. He has to get involved. His knight-errant code has been violated. Even though he does not know why he was hired by Heidi, six people were killed on his watch. Spenser simply says, "I wasn't very useful." He has to find the girl and solve the case.
But the presence of the Gray Man puts Spenser's life at risk. It is pretty much understood that the Gray Man is the only person alive who can kill Spenser (this is his third appearance in the series). The threat to Spenser brings in Hawk, his faithful thug sidekick. The banter between them is one of the great treats of this series.
"`And so you been doing what you do, which is poke around in the hornet's nest until you irritate a hornet,' Hawk said.
"`Yes,'
"`Not a bad technique,' Hawk said, `long as you got me to walk behind you.'"
Indeed, the Gray Man does try to kill Spenser and the bodies pile up. Meanwhile, the mother of the bride, Heidi, shows very little interest in the fate of her own daughter, and other players involved just wish Spenser would go away.
When the Spenser series started, Spenser was a veteran of the Korean War. There have been a lot of wars involving America since then. The series acknowledges that Spenser is aging but not that he and Hawk are men in their 70s beating up tough guys half their age. That is not the point. The series stays fresh with timely and timeless hard-boiled stories and brilliant writing.
People still kill for greed, sex and power --- the reasons they always did. And it is not just the Gray Man involved here, but a gray world where sometimes, maybe even most of the time, people die for nothing. But that does not mean Spenser is going to stop trying to find justice his own way.
ROUGH WEATHER packs an explosive punch. It is the perfect book for a lazy fall weekend. Parker is a great writer at the absolute top of his game. Reading his books is like being in the room watching Sinatra sing.
--- Reviewed by Tom Callahan
What You Would Expect - and Not Much More November 17, 2008 This is exactly what you would expect from a Spenser novel; i.e.: witty dialogue, warmth and humor with Susan, warmth, humor and toughness with Hawk, Spenser beating up at least one muscle-bound tough, Hawk loyally at his side, moneyed people without scruples, Boston settings - which includes, of course, Spenser looking out his office window admiring female pedestrians below - and Pearl getting table scraps, long after Spenser has theorized with her only to not get a response from the dog. Don't forget Spenser's admittedly most effective strategy, which is to annoy the bad guys until they come after him. Add to this some of the usual supporting cast: Healy, Quirk and Tony Marcus and his underlings and you have the formula and now formulaic Spenser novel. All of the above was in this rendition.
Unlike much earlier Spenser novels, however, "Tough Money" does not include an engaging plot. It is regrettably predictable. Once you put together all the elements listed above in these increasingly short novels, there is not much room to include much complexity in the plot, I guess. There is very little tension in this book, even after a violent kidnapping on an island in the middle of a hurricane.
I enjoyed this book. I enjoyed it like getting together for an evening with old friends. There may not be much new, but it is still a relaxing and enjoyable time together. If you've like Spenser all these years, this will be enjoying. I do wish, though, that Mr. Parker would get back to his more challenging mystery plots. The same conversations with the same friends can get old after a while without something new, or at least something exciting to talk about.
Casual entertainment November 16, 2008 At first there was denial, surely Parker could still write great Spenser novels. Then there was anger why wasn't Parker writing great Spenser novels? Now there is acceptence that Parker can't write great Spenser novels but he can write ones that pass the time.
This is a good book for that 3 hour flight you have to take or the three hours you wait at the airport to take the flight. Nothing new happens but Susan is a little less irritating than usual and some of the action is solid.
Even with double spacing and many of the pages only half full this book still doesn't get to 300 pages so you'll get through it fast and if your fan of Robert B. Parker you might be like me and realize that he's going to keep writing these things and I guess I'll keep reading them.
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