From Publishers Weekly
When a client who suspects his wife is cheating on him is
murdered in Parker's 35th snappy Spenser adventure (after
Hundred-Dollar Baby), the Boston PI takes it personally,
not only because the case resonates with Spenser's past
history with love interest Susan, but also because, like
Dashiell Hammett's Sam Spade, Spenser feels he can't let
a client get murdered without doing something about it.
The repartee is up to Parker's high standards, and the detection
is hands on and straightforward, with Spenser carrying the
load. Since Spenser's aides, including the stalwart Hawke,
outclass the heavies, Spenser has time to deal with the
mysterious other man, Perry Alderson, whose academic background
appears as suspect as his dealings with various subversive
groups. This briskly paced cat-and-mouse game offers Spenser
fans exactly what they've come to expect from the reliable
Parker—no-nonsense action and plenty of romantic give-and-take
between Susan and Spenser, who even find the subject of
marriage intruding once more. (Oct.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of
Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. --This text refers
to the Hardcover edition.
From Booklist
*Starred Review* In his Spenser novels, when he's writing
at the top of his game (which he is here), Parker is like
a brilliant musician. From the opening chords—which,
in just about every Spenser novel, comprise the staging
of the first meeting between private-eye Spenser and a troubled
client—you know you're listening to someone who has
absolute command of his work. And it just gets better, as
Parker builds his theme, with variations both comic and
thrilling. This time out, in the thirty-fifth addition to
the series, the troubled client is a husband who feels his
wife has been behaving bizarrely. Spenser thinks she's probably
having an affair, and through the magic of a planted listening
device, he presents the worried husband with the damning
evidence. The device has also picked up that the wife's
lover is involved in a group called Last Hope, which turns
out to be a kind of brokerage outlet for terrorists looking
for equipment and other terrorists. The case has moved from
the kind of private-eye work that Spenser finds sleazy to
one with horrific ramifications. The story itself makes
compelling reading on its own, but Parker, as usual, spikes
it with caustic wit and the interplay between Spenser and
his longtime love, Susan. And here he ups the ante by calling
on Spenser to use all his brain and brawn to protect Susan.
Terrific. Fletcher, Connie