jueves, 14 de julio de 2011

David Baldacci, The Collectors - Camel Club #2

The Collectors (Camel Club, #2)The Collectors by David Baldacci

My rating: 4 of 5 stars


A talented spy-for-hire assassin shoots the Speaker of the House and kills the director of the Library of Congress's Rare Books Room. How could these two crimes be related? One of the members of the Camel Club, Caleb Shaw is thrown in the middle of the case, by nearly falling victim too.
Meanwhile, in Atlantic City, a gifted beautiful con woman assembles a first rate team to pull an incredible and dangerous scam on one of the most dangerous men in the country. She succeeds taking 40 million dollars from this bad man. When she is about to disappear and go under the radar, to prevent being caught by this dangerous man, she reads that her ex-husband, the director of the Rare Books Room has died. So she goes to Washington for his burial, discovering the Camel Club, which informs her that her husband had been murdered.
She and the Camel Club join forces and unravel a spy network, which if continued, would have brought America to its knees.



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David Baldacci, The Camel Club - Camel Club #1

The Camel Club (Camel Club #1)The Camel Club by David Baldacci

My rating: 3 of 5 stars


This is a weird book about conspiracy freaks joined together in a group called The Camel Club. The formula works, these four misfits not only survive against incredible odds, but save their president and country from a plot that would have led to nuclear disaster. The group’s leader has taken the name of "Oliver Stone". One night, while meeting on Roosevelt Island the four club members witness a murder of a Secret Service employee. The two-team hit men see them and persecute them shooting at them in the middle of the Potomac. The Camel Club takes on the offensive trying to find out who the killers are, joining forces with a Secret Service agent. The Americans –thinking the Syrians are behind the plot—get ready to nuke Damascus. Yes, farfetched, but good solid fun reading.



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Robert B. Parker's 6th's Sunny Randall's Novel

Spare ChangeSpare Change by Robert B. Parker

My rating: 4 of 5 stars


Sunny joins forces with her father in order to crack an old case which resurfaces again. Her father was the principal in a series of murders by a criminal dubbed "The Spare Change Killer" 30 years back. The same style murders start happening all over again, the police immediately seek out the cop, now retired, and who headed the original investigation: Phil Randall, Sunny’s father. Phil asks his daughter to help him catch the criminal who eluded him before. Early on the case, Sunny finds her man, but it is just her intuition, lacking solid evidence. Few believe her, but eventually she is able to snare him into a trap, setting herself up to become the next victim, the murderer is eventually killed in a shootout.
This is a good book with a credible plot. This is Parker at his best, and the last of the Sunny Randall’s books.
Fiction, Suspense, Mystery & Detective, Mystery fiction, Women private investigators, Women Sleuths, Thriller, Boston, Randall, Sunny



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Robert B. Parker's 9th Jesse Stone Novel

Split Image (Jesse Stone, #9)Split Image by Robert B. Parker

My rating: 4 of 5 stars


A foot soldier of a local underworld boss is found in the trunk of his car. The local tough guy is enjoying a comfortable "retirement" with his beautiful wife, Rebecca, living next door to another mafia kingpin married with Rebecca’s twin sister. Later, this high-ranking crime figure is found dead on Paradise Beach. These twins are directly involved. Jesse eventually cracks the case, while finally letting go of his cheating and manipulating ex-wife Jenn. Jesse starts a more serious relationship with Sunny Randall.
This is a good book to end the Jesse Stone's series.



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