Widow's Walk
โ Scribed by Robert B. Parker
- Publisher
- Berkley Books
- Year
- 2003;2008
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 104 KB
- Edition
- Berkley premium ed
- Category
- Fiction
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
EDITORIAL REVIEW:
"Sometimes you have to wonder how Robert B. Parker keeps his mojo working. . . . There is a trick to keeping the faith with an old hero. In an age of shifty heroes with shaky values, he has created a hero who can still stand up for himself-and us." (*The New York Times Book Review*) When fifty-one-year-old Nathan Smith, a once-confirmed bachelor, is found in his bed with a hole in his head made by a .38-caliber slug, it's hard not to imagine Nathan's young bride as the one with her finger on the trigger. Even her lawyer thinks she's guilty. But given that Mary Smith is entitled to the best defense she can afford-and thanks to Nathan's millions, she can afford plenty-Spenser hires on to investigate Mary's bona fides. Mary's alibi is a bit on the flimsy side: She claims she was watching television in the other room when the murder occurred. But the couple was seen fighting at a high-profile cocktail party earlier that evening, and the prosecution has a witness who says Mary once tried to hire him to kill Nathan. What's more, she's too pretty, too made-up, too blonde, and sleeps around-just the kind of person a jury loves to hate. Spenser's up against a wall; leads go nowhere, no one knows a thing. Then a young woman, recently fired from her position at Smith's bank, turns up dead. Mary's vacant past suddenly starts looking meaner and darker-and Spenser's suddenly got to watch his back. With lean, crackling dialogue, crisp action, and razor-sharp characters, *Widow's Walk* is another triumph.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
### Amazon.com Review It's good to see private eye Spenser back in Boston, after his ludicrous imitation of a frontier lawman in Robert B. Parker's *Potshot*. But he's getting nowhere investigating the gunshot murder of banker Nathan Smith in *Widow's Walk*. The cops figure Smith's ingenuous but un
When Nathan Smith, 51, is found in bed with a hole in his head it's hard not to imagine his young bride as the one with the finger on the trigger. Even her lawyer thinks she is guilty. But given that Mary Smith is entitled to the best defence she can afford - and thanks to Nathan's millions, she can
### Amazon.com Review It's good to see private eye Spenser back in Boston, after his ludicrous imitation of a frontier lawman in Robert B. Parker's *Potshot*. But he's getting nowhere investigating the gunshot murder of banker Nathan Smith in *Widow's Walk*. The cops figure Smith's ingenuous but un
A New York Times Bestseller When fifty-one-year-old banker Nathan Smith is found in bed with a .38-caliber hole in his head, it's hard not to imagine his young bride's finger on the trigger. But Mary Smith is entitled to the best defense she can afford, and now she can afford plenty. Enter Spenser,