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Boston PI Spenser takes on a new case in this installment in Robert B. Parker's iconic New York Times bestselling series. Carolina Garcia-Ramirez is a rising star in national politics, taking on the establishment with her progressive agenda. Tough, outspoken, and driven, the young congresswoman has ignited a new conversation in Boston about race, poverty, health care, and the environment. Now facing her second campaign, she finds herself not only fighting a tight primary with an old guard challenger but also contending with numerous death threats coming from hundreds of suspects. When her chief of staff reaches out to Spenser for security and help finding the culprits of what he believes to be the most credible threats, Garcia-Ramirez is less than thrilled. Since her first grassroots run, she’s used to the antipathy and intimidation women of color often face when seeking power. To her, it’s all noise. But it turns out an FBI agent disagrees, warning Spenser that Garcia-Ramirez might be in real danger this time. It doesn’t take long for Spenser to cross paths with an extremist group called The Minutemen, led by a wealthy Harvard grad named Bishop Graves. Although Graves is a social media sensation, pushing an agenda of white supremacy and toxic masculinity, he denies he’s behind the attacks. As the primary nears and threats become a deadly plot, it’s up to Spenser, Hawk, and a surprise trusted ally to ensure the congresswoman is safe. This is Spenser doing what he does best, living by a personal code and moral compass that can’t ever be broken.
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This originally appeared at The Irresponsible Reader.
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Over the years, many things have changed about my profession. I no longer kept an actual landline on my desk. Since no one had called it since a little past the first of the millennium, I discontinued the service.
My superhuman ability to scroll through microfilm was no longer in demand. Almost anything I needed to look up, from old news stories, to criminal histories, to vehicle records, could be found online. Although I missed my visits to the Boston Public Library, I'd accepted the long, boring hours at my desk, thinking about how many old cases I could've solved with Google.
BYE BYE BABY
Looking for Rachel Wallace
Looking for Rachel Wallace
* Double Deuce, Thin Air, and Pale Kings and Princes jumped to mind as clearly political, too. If I let myself spend time thinking about it, I'd have no problem coming up with more.
The Widening Gyre
The Widening Gyre
* Oh, look, another one!
“Have you found any suspects?” Susan said.
“Nope.”
“Got any leads?” she said.
“Zip.”
“Planning on doing more than just poking around and annoying people?”
“Why mess with a winning formula?”
Lullaby
BYE BYE BABY
“You think these threats could be legitimate?”
“Maybe” [Wayne Cosgrove] said. “Hell, It only takes one person. It's just a goddamn mess to see through all the noise and bluster these days. Everyone is angry. Everyone has an ax to grind. At least in the old days, a nut had to roll a sheet of paper into the typewriter or paste together some jumbled clippings from a magazine. But now all they have to do is use a dummy email account and be done.”
“The perils of sleuthing in the twenty-first century.”
Series
50 primary books51 released booksSpenser is a 51-book series with 50 primary works first released in 1973 with contributions by Robert B. Parker, Michael Prichard, and 5 others.
Series
10 primary booksAce Atkins Spenser series is a 10-book series with 10 primary works first released in 2012 with contributions by Ace Atkins and Robert B. Parker.