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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Introducing Saxon, July 8, 2001
This is Les Roberts' first book, introducing us to Saxon, a private investigator who is also an actor. His secretary calls him one night after her husband has been shot at outside the home of renowned author Buck Weldon. Saxon agrees to look into it and it becomes apparent that the target of the attack was most likely Buck Weldon himself. It wasn't the first attempt on his life, which prompts Saxon to investigate further. Also prompting him to investigate further is Buck's beautiful daughter, for whom Saxon has fallen utterly and hopelessly in love. This book is somewhat reminiscent of the Elvis Cole books by Robert Crais, although Saxon is not quite as pithy in his dealings with clients, nor as cool. The story moves at a good pace, but it contained no real surprises. Those that were meant to be earth-shattering revelations were telegraphed and I easily figured them out long before they happened. All in all this is a quite enjoyable book, yet didn't contain anything that made it stand out from the many other private investigator books out there.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Author Pays Dearly for Secret Satisfaction, January 3, 2010
Buck Weldon. Jack Kale. Buck is money, jack is money, kale and cabbage, cabbage means money, of course; mystery solved! How could I have missed it? Perhaps I had too high hopes for this novel, for once I learned that Les Roberts was a member of the second Pink Tea, I have wanted to read and study all his novels. And once I discovered the title of Les's first novel which also appeared in the prose of two other novels I'm keenly interested in, all three novels published in 1987, a team of wild horses couldn't have held me back from reading "An Infinite Number of Monkeys." I agree with the first Amazon reviewer, however, the novel didn't separate itself enough from the pack of other hardboiled detective novels to make itself memorable. As the plot unfolded, I lost some steam, probably from reading the book's reviews/dust jacket cover blurbs before hand that revealed too much about what was going to happen. I gained steam near the end of the novel, however, because I didn't know who the killer was. (I guessed the secret, but couldn't connect the secret with who would kill over it and why.) I will definitely read some more Les Roberts, probably his Cleveland based novels since they garner excellent reviews.
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