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From Amazon.com: The frighteningly prolific mystery writer Donald E. Westlake, a.k.a. Richard Stark, ended his legendary series of books about a career criminal known only as Parker with 1974's Butcher's Moon. He cited too much competition from copycats in print, on film, and on television. Persuaded by fans and family, Westlake has resurrected Parker with a welcome burst of energy and imagination. The felon and his long-time lady friend Claire are enjoying the quiet life in their New Jersey lakeside home when Parker's invited to become part of a plan to remove a large sum of cash from a glossy TV-preacher named William Archibald. It's a heist that goes wrong from the start and turns into a tense, chaotic ballet of betrayal and death. One of Parker's partners is a weak babbler, another a cold traitor. Archibald's security chief is a tenacious pursuer, intent on retrieving his employer's money. Along the way, we learn how to hide crooks, cars, and cash in a small city with an efficient police force; how to escape from a variety of traps and sealed rooms; and most of all how Parker has managed to stay alive--in readers' minds as well as in the brain of his creator--for all these years.
pretty good: I enjoyed the movie Payback, based on "The Hunter", by Stark, so I went to get it but couldn't, so I picked this one instead. I enjoyed the book, and thought it was well written, but I have a couple complaints; 1. I frequently doubted the effectiveness of the crooks' plans. They hang around the immediate vicinity of the crime for days, eating in restaurants, checking in and out of motels, stealing cars, etc, all on the pretext that this is less likely to lead to capture than simply leaving town would be. 2. The climax,with Parker and Liss playing hide and seek in a dark house, dragged on way too long, and then the very end was way too abrupt, as if the author had to pee, but wanted to finish the book first. I did enjoy the book overall, though.
Parker: A Bad Guy Who's a Helluva Good Read: Hey Parker, long time no see. Damn good to hear from you again. I know you have no use for this friendly banter so I'll shut up. But really man, hope you stick around plenty.
New to me but now I'm hooked: Although I adore the crime/detective genre I must confess that I'd never even heard of Richard Stark (and hadn't read Westlake either). But now I'm hooked. To my mind the writing - sharp, clear, direct prose that I would die for - in "Comeback" is superb and I coundn't put the book down. The characters were equally as fascinating as some of the best in Elmore Leonard, who is one of my all time favorites favorites. I'll wait until "Backflash" comes out in paperback, but in the meantime I'm ordering some of the older books. Can't wait till they arrive!
Criminal adventure, intricate heists, fun read.: Parker is a heister, a man who plans and carries out major thefts with the help of other heisters, chosen for the job at hand. He is unabashedly a crook. The stakes are real -- if you are hurt on a job, you will likely be killed by your partners who want to ensure their safety. In this book, Parker is ripping off a televangelist, at a stadium prayer revival. Things start going wrong after his team gets the money. The story is gripping, and a fast read. The author stays true to the characters and situation. There is an entire genre of fiction -- Block's hitman series, Max Allan Collins' Quarry novels, and these fine novels about Parker -- that involve criminal men acting within their criminal impulses in adventurous situations. For some reason I am drawn to these stories -- they offer no moral redemption, but have a hard boiled honesty about the human condition. And they are fun to read. probably because your average white bread suburbanite loves to imagine a transgressive life of adventurous crime.
Classic Parker - Stark/Westlake, But.....: I enjoyed the story, have been reading Westlake since I was a kid and read The Spy in the Ointment. The Parker books by Stark were (are) more edgy and well written, good solid stories. Other reviewers here have done a much better job than I can discussing the merits of the story and the characters, etc. I found Comeback to be a bit disappointing, however - it was too easy a read. Amazon so helpfully shows the books dimensions (slightly larger than your typical paperback) and it's page count (304), but when it arrived and I opened it, I was dismayed to see that the book had huge margins and very generous line spacing - I had to doubletake and be sure I had not ordered the "large print" version! Overall, a good story, there just wasn't quite as much of it as I had expected.
| Author: | Richard Stark | | Binding: | Mass Market Paperback | | Dewey Decimal Number: | 818'.54 | | EAN: | 9782743608729 | | ISBN: | 2743608722 | | Number Of Pages: | 265 | | Publication Date: | 2001-12-03 | | Release Date: | 2001-12-03 |
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