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Loading... Black Widow (2008)by Randy Wayne White
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. Synopsis: Doc Ford has just received two letters. One is from an old friend who reveals the name of the person who killed Doc's parents. The other is from a doctor telling Doc that he has a brain disease. These bombshells are secondary to finding that his god-daughter is being blackmailed by unscrupulous people on a Caribbean island. Doc investigates and finds that he is not the only one interested in breaking up this ring. A retired British secret agent is also in the case. Together they go after the head of the ring and run into murders, viscous dogs, and a truth that will derail the lives of several people. Review: This is one of White's better books. It is full of suspense, carries a twisted plot line, and introduces several intriguing characters. It also brings up some interesting mental/physical pathology. Doc Ford is asked by his goddaughter to help her pay off a blackmailer who has an incriminating tape of her and her three best friends partying on St. Arc. When the blackmailers don't back down Doc travels to St. Arc to track them down. The book goes into some pretty out there and somewhat silly areas but if you can suspend disbelief it's not a bad thriller. Another skillfully written, mostly well-paced Doc Ford novel. Ford gets involved in thwarting a blackmail scheme involving his goddaughter and her friends after a pre-wedding trip to a Caribbean island. The first part of the book takes place in the comfortable confines of Dinkin’s Bay Marina and Sanibel Island. The dangerous part takes place in the tropics. Randy Wayne White continues his fascination with wealth and exclusivity by creating a truly bizarre resort run by a hermaphrodite on a fictional island where the lucky few go to relax and detox, but are subject to humiliation, forced and drugged sex, and eventually blackmail. This is a strange and convoluted novel, but somehow makes more sense than some of the later entries in the Doc Ford series. no reviews | add a review
Belongs to SeriesDoc Ford (15)
Entreated by his goddaughter to help pay off a blackmailer who videotaped her bachelorette party and then threatened to expose her debauchery, Doc Ford reluctantly agrees and then finds himself in danger when the extortionist releases the tape anyway. No library descriptions found. |
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)813.54Literature American literature in English American fiction in English 1900-1999 1945-1999LC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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Cool and interesting elements of geography and explorer history thrown in too like:
"The plaque says this map was drawn in 1507."
"That’s right. The Waldseemuller map" There was a smile in her voice. "It's not the original, of course. Notice something unusual about it?"
"Yes. It shows the western coast of South America, and the Baja Peninsula. Hudson Bay, too. All fairly accurate. I'm trying to remember my fifth-grade history -"
"Excellent catch, Dr. Ford. You're thinking of Magellan. He didn't reach the Pacific Coast until decades later, and he never really explored it. And explorer Henry Hudson didn't arrive in the Americas until a hundred years later."
I said, "So the map couldn't have been made in 1507."
"But it was - it's been well documented. The maps on that wall represent some of history's great mysteries. That's what Sir James claims, anyway. The Stuttgart Map, for instance, is from the sixteenth century. It shows Antarctica in incredible detail - two hundred and fifty years before western explorers had laid eyes on it. Not only that, it's the Antarctic as it would appear without ice. I checked for myself. It’s true."
I compared the map to the world globe that sat beside a leather reading chair. She was right about the accuracy. The map was dated 1535.
"How can that be?"
The woman shrugged. ( )