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Mass Market Paperback Endangered Species Book

ISBN: 1575666715

ISBN13: 9781575666716

Endangered Species

(Book #6 in the Robin Light Series)

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Recommended

Format: Mass Market Paperback

Condition: Good

$10.19
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Book Overview

When the neighborhood tough kid, Manuel, and his cousin Eli enter Robin Light's pet store with a wild story about a suitcase full of smuggled Cuban cigars, Robin can't resist nosing around. But she... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

2 ratings

Compelling animal rights read.

This was my first read of a Barbara Block novel and I was sufficiently intrigued to want to read more of this author's work. As with a lot of first reads, it can be a bit difficult to warm to an already well-established character but I found Robin Light generally believable, in the usual can-do mould of female private detective protagonists. I found the endangered animal theme fresh and compelling and the Syracuse settings, and descriptions of the young secondary characters, gritty and painfully realistic.

Barbara Block deserves a wider public.

On her fifth go-round, Robin Light's strengths are all on display. We've come to expect the funny-tough, lackadaisically precise prose style that makes her sound more than a little like a depressed Kinsey Millhone, and by now Barbara Block has Robin's voice down pat. It's also fun to hear it being applied to a world in which depression, both emotional and economic, is the keynote: the sad and fascinating city of Syracuse, New York. Block's descriptions of Syracuse and renderings of its mood are so marvelously accurate that one begins to see Kinsey Millhone as the interloper, applying the stoic voice in her own nouveau riche Californian neighborhood: however derivative Block's style may be, it fits Syracuse better. Robin Light herself is more believable than Millhone as a survivor who is compassionate enough to think the worst of human beings. Instead of being a somewhat obnoxiously resilient loner by choice, she's a widow struggling to support a pet shop and a sideline career as a detective. The weakness of this series is that with an eminently human heroine who tends to make the sort of absurd mistakes her readers would (and have), by Number Five we begin to doubt whether she would still be alive, still sleuthing, and still have the same friends. Block will have to work harder than Sue Grafton to prevent her series from deteriorating into formula given that it would be much more damaging to her own best effects. This is a middling entry in the series--better than the last, but not as good as the first--and is distinguished by featuring a cast of very real and very obnoxious teens. Block's fans still need to wait for her breakthrough book, which we can only hope will bring her the feedback essential to any long-running series. In the meantime, this book is essential reading for addicts.
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