Synopses & Reviews
The new Jesse Stone novel in Robert B. Parker'sand#160;New York Times bestselling seriesand#151;and this one is and#147;a cause for celebrationand#8221; (January Magazine). and#160;
A reunion with former baseball teammates leaves Jesse Stone grappling with memories and regrets over what might have been, and that includes bittersweet memories of his old girlfriend, the darkly sensuous and secretive Kayla, who has unexpectedly arrived at the reunion as well.
and#160;
But when a young woman is found murdered in Paradise, and her boyfriend, a son of one of the townand#8217;s most prominent families, is kidnapped, Jesseand#8217;s investigation yields some troubling suspicions: the reunion and the murder are connected, and one of Jesseand#8217;s old friends is intimately involved in the crimes.
Review
and#8220;A great addition to the series.and#8221;and#8212;
West Orlando News and#8220;No one understands what makes Bob Parkerand#8217;s Jesse Stone tick better than Michael Brandman...and#8221; and#8212;Tom Selleck, star of the Jesse Stone TV movies
and#8220;If Spencer is the invincible knight, the timeless hero of American detective fiction, then Jesse Stone is the flawed hero of the moment.and#8221;and#8212;The New York Times Book Review
Review
and#8220;A great addition to the series.and#8221;and#8212;
West Orlando News and#8220;No one understands what makes Bob Parkerand#8217;s Jesse Stone tick better than Michael Brandman...and#8221; and#8212;Tom Selleck, star of the Jesse Stone TV movies
and#8220;If Spencer is the invincible knight, the timeless hero of American detective fiction, then Jesse Stone is the flawed hero of the moment.and#8221;and#8212;The New York Times Book Review
Review
and#8220;I had high hopes for what a writer of Colemanand#8217;s skill would bring to the series, and those hopes have not just been met, they have been exceeded. Iand#8217;m sure I am not going to be the first, or the only, person to declare that he has saved Jesse Stoneand#8230;
Blind Spot is cause for celebration.and#8221;and#8212;
January Magazine and#8220;A spellbinding mysteryand#8230;fast-paced, excitingand#8230;Coleman writes a potent crime story. Fans and newcomers alike will get hooked and should look forward to the next Jesse Stone book by Reed Coleman.and#8221;and#8212;Crimespree Magazine
and#8220;Blind Spot is everythingand#8230;this series can and should be.and#8221;and#8212;Bookreporter.com
Synopsis
When two cases collide, police chief Jesse Stone is caught in the middle in this New York Times bestseller.
Autumn in Paradise, Massachusetts, is usually idyllic. Not this time. A Hollywood movie company has come to town and brought troubled star Marisol Hinton--beautiful, talented, demanding, and scared out of her wits that her estranged husband's jealousy might take a violent turn. When she receives a death threat, Jesse and the Paradise police department go on high alert. But more lives are in danger than Jesse imagines--including his own.
Synopsis
One girl is a teenage dose of pretty poison. The other is a movie starlet on the run from a violent past. These two cases collide in Paradise and Jesse Stone is trapped between them.
Synopsis
One girl is a teenage dose of pretty poison. The other is a movie starlet on the run from a violent past. These two cases collide in Paradise and Jesse Stone is trapped between them.
About the Author
Robert B. Parker was the author of seventy books, including the legendary Spenser detective series, the novels featuring Chief Jesse Stone, and the acclaimed Virgil Cole/Everett Hitch westerns, as well as the Sunny Randall novels. Winner of the Mystery Writers of America Grand Master Award and long considered the undisputed dean of American crime fiction, he died in January 2010.
Michael Brandman, the award-winning producer of more than thirty motion pictures, collaborated with Robert B. Parker for years on movie projects, the Spenser TV movies, and the Jesse Stone series of TV movies starring Tom Selleck. Brandman cowrote the screenplays for Stone Cold, No Rumors, and Innocents Lost, and supervised the screenplay adaptations of Night Passage, Death in Paradise, and Sea Change. He and Selleck were executive producers of the entire series. Brandman lives in California.and#160;