"Strong crime drama"
When his marriage to Jenn broke up, Jesse Stone left
California and accepted a job as chief of police in
Paradise, Massachusetts. Jenn followed soon after and
although they see each other on occasion, they also date
other people. Jesse tells every woman he's involved with
that he's still in love with Jenn and until she tells him
it's over, he won't commit to anyone else. Usually Paradise is a quiet little town but now Jesse is
working on two cases that are particularly ugly. Three
young men rape a teenage girl in her school and they
threaten to show pictures of her during the sexual assault
if she reports it to the police. Jesse wants to find a way
to charge the young men while keeping the girl's name out
of it. The second case is even more horrifying. A husband
and wife team picks out a victim at random, stalks him, and
they both simultaneously kill him with identical weapons.
Jesse, who knows he's their next target, sets up a trap
using himself as bait but they evade it and ride off into
the sunset. Comparisons between Spenser and Jesse are inevitable.
Spenser is self assured and confident of Susan's love while
Jesse is vulnerable and has no idea if he and Jenn will
ever get together. Spenser, as a PI, sometimes bends or
breaks the rules while Jesse adheres to them. The
protagonist in STONE COLD is more interesting because
readers don't know what Robert B. Parker will do next with
his character. Stark prose and plenty of action is what
this novel is all
about.
Reviewed by Harriet Klausner
Posted September 25, 2003
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