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Death in Paradise. [Englisch] [Taschenbuch]

Robert B. Parker
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Wird oft zusammen gekauft

Death in Paradise. + Trouble in Paradise (Jesse Stone Novels) + Night Passage (A Jesse Stone Novel)
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Produktinformation

  • Taschenbuch: 320 Seiten
  • Verlag: Berkley; Auflage: Reprint (5. November 2002)
  • Sprache: Englisch
  • ISBN-10: 0425187063
  • ISBN-13: 978-0425187067
  • Größe und/oder Gewicht: 18,8 x 10,7 x 2,3 cm
  • Durchschnittliche Kundenbewertung: 5.0 von 5 Sternen  Alle Rezensionen anzeigen (2 Kundenrezensionen)
  • Amazon Bestseller-Rang: Nr. 75.645 in Englische Bücher (Siehe Top 100 in Englische Bücher)

Mehr über den Autor

Robert B. Parker
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Produktbeschreibungen

Amazon.com's Best of 2001

With assured confidence and a master's economy of means, Robert B. Parker, who is best known for his Spenser series, delivers one of his finest, most absorbing works yet. This third entry in the Jesse Stone series finds Stone--a former LAPD cop fired for drinking on the job--serving as chief of police in the town of Paradise, Massachusetts, and investigating the murder of a teenaged girl whose decomposed body turns up in the local lake. As he follows slender threads of evidence into an ugly world of exploited teens, several subplots crisscross, keeping things lively.

But Jesse's struggle with alcohol and his loving, troubled relationship with his ex-wife are at least as compelling as the external plot events. Parker doesn't usually give his characters much of an inner life, but here--in deftly compressed prose, much of it dialog--he paints an understated, believable portrait of a tough guy grappling with tough issues. This smooth-reading book goes down easy but packs a surprising wallop. --Nicholas H. Allison -- Dieser Text bezieht sich auf eine vergriffene oder nicht verfügbare Ausgabe dieses Titels.

From Booklist

If this thinly plotted and flatly written thriller were a debut novel from an unknown, rather than the work of one of the reigning heavyweights in the mystery genre, it might not even merit a review. But the author is Robert B. Parker, justifiably touted for his Spenser novels, and his name will draw a crowd. The first problem is with Spenser's new hero, seen previously in Night Passage (1997) and Trouble in Paradise (1998). Jesse Stone, former LAPD cop and current chief of police in Paradise, New England, is no Spenser. He doesn't seem to be any character at all. He plays softball; he's divorced; he engages in painfully obvious station-house one-liners. There isn't the feeling, as there is on every page of a Spenser novel, that you're with a fine intelligence about to make interesting observations. The second problem is the writing, which reads like high-school Hemingway: "It was a bright summer morning. Jesse was feeling good." The relentless rhythm of choppy sentences and short chapters adds up to nothing and is finally only annoying. And the plot--Jesse's softball game is cut short by the discovery of a dead young girl floating in a lake--is a sleepwalk, as Jesse moves through the requisite grilling of negligent parents, oversexed boyfriend, and friends hiding a secret. There's very little to recommend here, except to say that Parker's fans will be curious about it. Connie Fletcher
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved -- Dieser Text bezieht sich auf eine vergriffene oder nicht verfügbare Ausgabe dieses Titels.

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What Matters Most? 15. Mai 2007
Von Donald Mitchell TOP 500 REZENSENT
Format:Gebundene Ausgabe
Jesse Stone series, an emotionally hurting, alcoholic police chief, faces the difficult challenges of stopping violent men with his same weakness for drinking while keeping his own needs for booze and his ex-wife under control. Despite being a personal mess, the victims find an avenger in him, often succeeding by moving way outside of what the law allows. Jesse Stone's solutions are more like Zorr'os than any respectable law man you'll ever meet.

During the course of the novel, Jesse Stone has several epiphanies that mark out the boundaries for how he can start to put his life back together. You'll find yourself rooting for him to do so.

The writing is Robert Parker in top form. The story line is as simple as it could be. The sentences are deft. The dialogue is spare and direct. Hemingway's top writing was often not as good as what Mr. Parker has accomplished in this novel.

If you love Spenser, you may or may not like Jesse Stone. The two characters are quite different. Jesse Stone has more problems than most people. He's an alcoholic, has been divorced by the only woman he's ever loved, and frequently breaks the law in his role as small-town police chief. Nights are ultimately dedicated to solitary drinking. Despite his flaws, Stone is capable of great caring and dedication.

The greatest brilliance of this novel is how deftly it weaves together the many sides of Jesse Stone's personality, his law enforcement responsibilities, and favorite activities into a complex composite of a man you will feel you know well. Each tiny episode in Death in Paradise is designed to both advance the solution of the mystery here and to unveil a little more of Jesse Stone to the reader. For those who want to get to know Jesse Stone, he offers one advantage over Spenser: Stone is much less predictable. As a result, the unfolding of the story leaves much more to be anticipated.

Jesse Stone is a man holding on by his fingernails to the remnants of what he wants in life: his ex-wife, a respectable job, and sobriety. He knows that he can easily stray over the edge and lose all three . . . permanently. Like the potential suicide teetering out over the edge of a building while thinking about jumping, he finds himself recoiling again and again from the abyss that yawns all around him. In doing so, he takes risks that would end it all. But these are only risks that serve others rather than himself. He takes his work home, which is part of the problem.

One of the most relaxing times of his life is during nightly softball games in the summer, when he can relive the glories of his life as a minor league player before a career-stopping injury to his throwing shoulder. Even here, he cannot escape the siren call of the booze as teammates gather for beers afterwards. Then, one night a cry intrudes. Two men have found what seems to have once been a young woman floating in the water. She looks like she has been dumped like trash. There are no reports of missing persons. Who is it? Who killed her? The investigation gently links from one fragile bit of evidence to the next. Drawing brilliantly on instincts honed while a homicide investigator for the L.A.P.D., Stone's net keeps turning up enough clues to advance the investigation. You'll find the experience like crossing a vast lake by hopping from one small stone to another. While most mysteries maximize the mystery, and minimize the procedure, Death in Paradise turns the procedure itself into a choreographed dance of great beauty. Conducted on a shoestring with inexperienced people makes the methods and progress involved all the more interesting to watch.

At another level, Death in Paradise also has a lot to say about personal priorities, especially about the ways that we look for love and appreciation. After you finish this book, list the ways that you seek more love. What problems could some of your methods create? In doing so, feel free to draw upon the mistakes that the characters in this novel make, as well as your own experiences.

Love life . . . and all the people in your life!

Free yourself from obsession and habit if you want to create the opportunity for love and happiness!
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Not Spenser, but ... 7. Januar 2011
Von buffona
Format:Taschenbuch
No, Jesse Stone is not Spenser. Where Spenser is the shining knight, mainly solving other people's problems, Jesse Stone is fighting his own demons along with crime. Yet, apart from being funny, he is most likeable despite all his imperfections (or maybe because of them?). His crime fighting solutions at times are quite unique, but certainly effective.

The story is beautifully plotted, very absorbing and never boring.

As usual, Parker's writing is impeccable. Without wasting a word he manages to convey everything. A very enjoyable and worthwhile read.
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Second in a Series: Death In Paradise 20. Dezember 2003
Von Kevin Tipple - Veröffentlicht auf Amazon.com
Format:Gebundene Ausgabe
Robert B. Parker is one of my guilty pleasures. Whether it is his long running Spenser series, or the two new series he has started featuring Sunny Randall or Jessie Stone, the books are all pretty much the same. Mr. Parker can be counted on to tell an interesting, relatively simplistic story where evil walks among us and will be struck down as fast as possible. Much like a great Steven Segal movie, the hero will do this almost single handily without a hair out of place and our hero is always a sure hit among the many ladies. When you don't want to have to think to follow along as a reader and you want a guaranteed escape from current reality, Mr. Parker is sure to come up with some enjoyable mind candy. This offering serves as yet another case in point.

Mr. Parker returns to the mean streets of small town life in Paradise, Massachusetts in his recent novel featuring Jesse Stone. Jesse is still the chief of Police and still torn by his love of drink as well as his love for his ex-wife, Jenn. Following up on his theme in Trouble In Paradise, the previous novel of the series, Jesse is still fighting the good fight. He wants Jenn back in the worst way, but is trying to stay strong in his resolve to allow her to find her own life and then decide if he still belongs. Their Wednesday night dates are still on and they remain open to seeing other partners. At the same time, he is still battling the idea that he is an alcoholic and that he will have to deal with it.

Both issues get pushed slightly backward as a body is discovered floating in the lake after a softball game. Jesse thinks he knows who it is and suspects that it is the body of a young teenage runaway. But her family won't acknowledge that she ever existed and due to the condition of the body, identification will take time.

As he and his small force of ten officers begin to work the case, a side story of domestic violence comes to his attention. Splitting his time between both cases becomes a full time effort as he tries to find one killer as well as preventing death in the other case. Jesse has his hands full and hardly breaks a sweat as he goes about his business working both cases.

Mr. Parker keeps up his long tradition of shallow characters, plenty of apparent action and almost continuous dialogue in this novel. At 294 pages in length, one would expect that this novel would not read as fast as it does. However, with so little narration and almost continuous dialogue consisting of very short sentences, it becomes an amazingly fast read. Mr. Parker won't change the world through his novels or how you look at it, but he can make you forget about it for a bit. Reminds one of a really good chocolate candy bar-great going down, but plenty of empty calories. Enjoy the break!

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Small town facing big city vices 7. Januar 2002
Von Terry L. Tyson - Veröffentlicht auf Amazon.com
Format:Gebundene Ausgabe
This is the first Jesse Stone novel I've read, but it certainly will not be the last. To call it a mystery would be inaccurate, for it more closely resembles a police procedural and character study than anything else. Parker's dialog is perhaps his strongest ability as a writer, but there is plenty of interesting plot and character development to keep the all but the most petulant reader satisfied. Death in Paradise is, in a word, FUN!

Parker has created believable worlds in all of his books with characters and places that ring true and the same is true in Death in Paradise. I get the sense that Parker has or is walking in Jesse Stone's shoes now and again. Stone's realizations about love, addiction, need and purpose are right on the money to the point of appearing to be autobiographical.

His familiar, quick style moves the story along very well and his dialog is always a treat. When a Parkeresque-recognizable Boston crime lord appears, I almost expected Hawk or Susan to walk around the corner and say "Hello!" Parker fans will be pleased, newcomers will be intrigued to read more.

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Superb Mystery 11. Oktober 2001
Von Sheri Melnick - Veröffentlicht auf Amazon.com
Format:Gebundene Ausgabe
Robert B. Parker once again scores a winning run with his third novel in the Jesse Stone series. Former L.A. homicide detective Jesse Stone is now Chief of Police in Paradise, Massachusetts after alcohol ruined both his detective job and his marriage. When the body of a young girl is found in a lake during one of Jesse's softball games, Chief Stone must use his well-honed investigative skills to find the killer.

Just as Jesse feels the need to lead his softball team (he once played in the minors), he must lead his police force in his quest to find the killer of the unidentified girl. Just to name a few on the force, there is Molly, with her Irish-Catholic sense of humor, a perfect combination with Jesse's dry wit. And Suitcase Simpson is only too eager to please his Chief though his experience with surveillance is nil.

As Jesse follows the trail of clues to discover the murderer's identity, his personal life is carefully revealed. His dependent relationship with his ex-wife, Jenn, is inextricably intertwined with his alcohol problem. And there is Lilly, the high school principal he is seeing seemingly to avoid loneliness.

Mr. Parker has penned another sure success, one of his best yet. The mystery is nothing short of excellent, as previously unrelated characters become suspects caught in a web that begins to unravel as their connection to each other is exposed. And Jesse is portrayed as a very real hero, a man who seems rather sure of himself to his peers and to women, but a man who battles quite a few demons in private.

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