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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
21 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Sensitive,
By Harmoni (United States of America) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Widening Gyre (Spenser Novels (Dell)) (Mass Market Paperback)
This is the 10th book in the Spenser series.Spenser is hired as a guard on the U.S. Senate campaign of ultra-Christian Meade Alexander. He soon finds out that Alexander is being blackmailed with the threat of making public a video of his wife in bed with a young man. Alexander truly loves his wife and would rather give up his political aspirations than humiliate her. Susan is in the midst of a one-year internship in Washington D.C. for her Ph.D. Spenser goes to D.C. on his case and finds Susan different in significant ways. "Her face was as it had always been: intricate, beautiful, expressive. In the last year somehow it had also become faintly remote, as if always she were listening to a whisper, barely audible, from someplace else: her name, maybe, tiny and hushed." Spenser is also very sensitive concerning the middle-aged women he sees having sex with four "college boys" who are secretly taping the rendesvous. "These women were real, with the fine roughening of skin here and there, the tiny sag at the breast, the small folds across the stomach that real women, and men, have. . . . That kind of vulnerability shouldn't be handed around. It was for someone who loved you and was vulnerable too."
12 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Getting hooked on Spenser,
By
This review is from: The Widening Gyre (Audio Cassette)
I listened to the unabridged audio cassette of this book, while traveling around town. I prefer not to get the condensed versions of the books where you miss the development of the story and characters and get only the basics. While this book did get a little too sentimental, I have to say that it was for the better. To get the insight into Spenser and how he feels in lieu of always getting the stony detective that defeats all his enemies and solves the crime was interesting. I thought the story itself was intriguing. Okay it wasn't as complicated as plots can be, but I definitely didn't find my interest wandering. I have read one Spenser book and listened to a couple of others on tape, and I have to say that this book will keep me going. If you haven't read or listened to a Spenser book before I do not feel that you will be lost out jumping into this one.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
macho detective snuffs out shakedown,
By Robert S. Newman "Bob Newman" (Marblehead, Massachusetts USA) - See all my reviews (VINE VOICE) (REAL NAME)
This review is from: The Widening Gyre (Spenser Novels (Dell)) (Mass Market Paperback)
I was driving down a narrow Maine highway. A blue sky, nearly cloudless, hung over the low forest. I wasn't nursing a bottle of Irish whisky. My stomach rumbled thanks to the low quality fried clams I'd eaten the night before. I spotted two overweight ladies in baseball t-shirts on a roadside porch. A sign read "Yard Sale". I had to stop. Amidst the junk and used kids' toys, I found two novels by Robert B. Parker. I bought them. Set me back fifty cents. What did "Gyre" mean, I wondered.
I didn't really find out, though "vortex" could be a choice. A tough Boston detective named Spenser gets hired by a born-again Christian politician to provide security. In Massachusetts ? Running for the Senate ? You know something is weird right from the start. I grabbed my mug of tea (Lipton's) and headed upstairs to read more. Yeah, this guy is tough, totes a piece, and can beat up any two hoodlums without breaking a sweat. But he has two lovers, a woman and a man. He believes in love. He reads Thomas Hobbes. Wonders about life and death. And other oldfashioned questions. He might be the last othe old school, but at the same time, he's pretty liberated too. A paradox. The politician's wife gets caught on videotape having sex with a young dude. He ain't her husband. Duhh. So, the tape falls into the hands of the opposition. Or so it seems. Spenser sorts it all out on a trip down to Washington. His clothes, his drinks, and his meals are all very much part of the scene. Back in Boston, he confronts the bad guys in their own den. It all comes together in the last chapters. Anais Nin once said, "We see things not as they are but as we are." Spenser is a lot like that and it will all depend on you too as to how you like this book. I liked the style, but this sort of novel reminds me of "Naked Gun". You enjoy and forget. Go to it. Don't omit some Irish whisky. Or tea.
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