
Stalker
Peter Decker/Rina Lazarus Series, Book 12
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- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
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نقد و بررسی

July 31, 2000
LAPD detective Peter Decker, promoted to lieutenant after his heroics in Jupiter's Bones (1999), is overloaded with troubles in this outstanding, suspense-packed mystery, the 12th in Kellerman's acclaimed series. As usual, a challenging case distracts Decker from his family, but this time there is one difference. Cindy, his smart, outspoken daughter from his first marriage, is now a cop, to the overprotective Decker's dismay. Meanwhile, Decker is faced with two different series of car-jackings. In one string, the thief targets young women carrying babies. The cops tie the other jackings to Armand Crayton, a sleazy real estate developer who had supposedly died in a car crash a year earlier, after being kidnapped. Several women Crayton knew have been threatened, their cars stolen. When Drecker discovers that an anonymous stalker has been harassing Cindy, he hits the roof. Is it one of her colleagues, or does trouble stem from her casual acquaintance with Crayton? Kellerman is a fine writer, beautifully evoking the feel of Los Angeles and creating scenes that would please Chandler and MacDonald. She deals realistically with the problems women face in a male police world. Her development of the tense father-daughter relationship is wise and honest: Decker is torn between his inability to accept Cindy as an independent adult and his pride in her accomplishments; meanwhile, Cindy respects and loves her father but is distraught by his interference in her personal and professional life. The complex Cindy is a most welcome addition to Kellerman's cast.

This is the eleventh in the series, but regulars Peter Decker and Rina Lazarus take a backseat in this one. Here Peter's daughter, Cindy, a rookie police officer is at the center of this multilayered and far-fetched story. The plot evolves around a year-old murder and the nastiness policemen dole out to policewomen; the denouement seems contrived. Paula Parker reads Peter Decker slowly, making him sound somewhat dim-witted while Marg and Rina sound like old biddies who should be trading recipes. Aficionados of this series will be put off by these characterizations. B.H.B. (c) AudioFile 2001, Portland, Maine
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