2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Reviewed by Barb Radmore, 22 Mar 2007
By Front Street Reviews www.frontstreetreviews.com - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Baby Shark's Beaumont Blues (Paperback)
Oh Baby, Baby. She is back, all rough, tough and soft around the edges. Kristin Van Dijk, who we met in Baby Shark, has returned to her crime fighting, but now she is Otis' partner in his PI business.
Kristin and Otis are hired to locate and rescue a kidnapped girl, who ends up more difficult to find and keep than they expected. What seemed like a simple rescue mission becomes convoluted case of deception, greed and dishonor.
In this installment of Kristen's adventures it is the characters that take center stage. Baby Shark introduced us to the main characters but that book was driven by the action, the violence. Beaumont Blues has taken the promise of the first one and given the characters a chance to grow. It is no less exciting, no less blood stained than the first one, but it also shows a maturity in development. It would have be easy for Robert Fate to rest on the momentum of Baby Shark, to recreate the "little lost girl fights back" theme but he was able to step back and let her mature. Otis has a bigger role this time as the friendly boss and father figure, and he fills it well. The assorted other characters that blast their way through the action are well drawn with Fate's usual tongue in cheek spin on motive and morality.
But, of course, it is also the action driven plot that makes this a one sitting book. As the action progresses faster than a bullet, or is that as fast as the numerous bullets, it maintains the velocity of non stop suspense and thrills. It still can have scenes such as "It looked as if we were in the middle of a Popeye comic strip with all the bodies strewn about. But it was no cartoon, it was a slaughterhouse. Blood everywhere." Kristin has matured, not mellowed. The ending is satisfyingly unexpected, with the humor that makes these books so creative and welcomed.
Next up is Baby Shark's Panhandle Caravan (name change Mr. Fate? What happened to Sooner Weekends?). It will be interesting to see what Robert Fate has planned next for Kristin and Otis.
3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Better than Baby Shark, 10 Mar 2007
By L. J. Roberts - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Baby Shark's Beaumont Blues (Paperback)
Kristin Van Dijk has been a PI and partner with Otis Millett for almost two years now. They are hired to return a runaway heiress as it is critical she reach her 18th birthday and be present at the reading of her father's will. They have rescued the heiress before, but this time it turns bad and Kristin ends up with two dead gangsters, the heiress, and the bag full of ransom money. And that's only the beginning as Kristin and Otis try to figure out what is really going on while keeping the heiress safe, although she disappears on them again, and themselves alive.
For me, this was a much better book than the first. The story had more balance to it, even with a higher body count than the first. But here, they are working with the law--at least as much as it is possible for them to do. The partnership of Otis and Kristin is wonderfully done and it's interesting to see Kristin's character develop through the story. Seeing men be dismissive of Kristin and, therefore, underestimate her, is an interesting reflection of that time. There is a secondary story of Virginia which dimension to the story. The sense of place is effective and the dialogue even more so. There are scenes of palpable suspense but it is balanced within the story, and a wonderful ending. I thoroughly enjoyed this book and am very glad I was persuaded to give it a chance.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Baby Shark's Beaumont Blues, 13 July 2008
By Helen Ginger - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Baby Shark's Beaumont Blues (Paperback)
Kristin Van Dijk may be a teenager, but she's grown into a full fighter in this, the second in Fate's Baby Shark series. She owns her moniker. She's now a PI with her mentor/teacher. The two of them work well together, figuring out what's going on, who's doing what, and how they can survive.
Baby Shark holds her own, doing as much and sometimes most of the fighting and stopping the bad guys. She's not only fun to read, she's an interesting and complex character. She has her own tragic past and in Baby Shark's Beaumont Blues she's beginning to recover from it and is becoming a strong woman and definitely a force to be reckoned with.