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Death in Paradise: A Jesse Stone Novel
 
 
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Death in Paradise: A Jesse Stone Novel [Paperback]

Robert B. Parker
4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Paperback: 304 pages
  • Publisher: No Exit Press; New edition edition (1 Jun 2002)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 1842430572
  • ISBN-13: 978-1842430576
  • Product Dimensions: 17.4 x 11.2 x 2.4 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 442,668 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Robert B. Parker
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Product Description

Review

"Nobody does it better than Parker" - The Sunday Times "Melancholy shadows this third, beautifully wrought Jesse Stone mystery; rarely if ever has Parker's fiction conveyed with such solemn intensity the challenge of living a good life in a world of sin" - Publisher's Weekly "Very readable, slick and professional." - Evening Standard "Non-stop, awesome characters and overall kick-ass entertainment." - Janet Evanovich "Robert B parker's Spenser is one of the best private detectives in fiction." - Sunday Telegraph "Parker has gone into brilliant overdrive." - The Literary Review

Product Description

Jesse Stone is just relishing another win with his softball team when he discovers a girl's body facedown in a nearby lake. Before long it becomes clear that the girl had a taste for the wild life; her own parents can't be bothered to report her missing, or even admit that she was once their child. All Jesse has to go on is a young man's school ring on a gold chain, and a hunch or two. 'Nobody does it better than Parker' - Sunday Times 'Very readable, slick and professional' - Evening Standard 'Brilliant overdrive' - Literary Review

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful
What Matters Most? 7 May 2004
By Donald Mitchell HALL OF FAME TOP 500 REVIEWER VINE™ VOICE
Format:Hardcover
Caution: This book addresses spousal abuse and sexual abuse of underage females. If either subject is distressing for you, this may not be the best book for you to read.

Review Summary: Death in Paradise is the best novel in the Jesse Stone series before Stone Cold. Jesse Stone, 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 Zorro's 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.

Review: 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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Format:Mass Market Paperback
I came late to Robert B. Parker, who died earlier this year (2011), but he clearly has a huge fan base, so why isn't he better known in Britain? He is best known for his Spenser private eye novels, of which there are are around 40, but in his later years he began another series, this time about Jesse Stone, an ex-LA cop now police chief in Paradise, Massachusetts. Death in Paradise is the third of the ten in this series, and tells of Stone's quest to catch the killer of a young girl found dead in a local lake. It's an exciting but pretty ugly tale of the sexual abuse of young girls, its subject matter however being far from exploitative, instead a serious warning in a popular format about what can happen through inadequate vigilance throughout the community - parents, schools, police, everyone.

Like all of Parker's novels, this is stripped-down stuff. Short sentences. Quick quips. Lots of badinage between Stone and his women. The perfect meal-in-one for an empty evening. Why? Because Parker's intelligence, good writing, humour, believable characters, likeable good guys and strong but completely unpreachy social messages are a potent mix. There's lots of good modern crime fiction around, but many of today's authors could learn a thing or two from this old master.

And, better still, I've still only read about a quarter of Parker's books, so I've got a lot still to look forward to.
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Format:Paperback
Fantastic. Although the later Stone Cold and High Profile may be better novels, the atmospheric beginning of Death in Paradise has not yet been surpssed in the Jesse Stone series. Makes you want to be sitting there, under the lights, drnking a beer with your mates.
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