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Loading... Playmates (1989)by Robert B. Parker
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. Quick in-between read to fill up the weekend. Classic Spenser. ( ) Synopsis: 'When talent comes, can graft be far behind? Dwayne Woodcock is arguably the best power forward in all of college basketball, not only the Big East Conference. So why, wonders Spenser, is he shaving points? Leading his Taft U. team to yet another banner season, Dwayne isn't throwing games; he's just not winning them by enough to cover the spread. Which means that someone's getting rich off Woodcock's on-court lapses, and Spenser's been hired by the powers at Taft to uncover the whos, hows, and whys. Abetted by his tough-guy buddy, Hawk and Susan Silverman, the sexy psychotherapist who is his great good friend, Spenser finds himself involved with all manner of sleaze artists - from corrupt academics to wise-guy hoods with graduate degrees. As his search propels him from the groves of academe into grungy bars and, finally, into a bloody confrontation and almost certain death, Spenser battles to salvage the soul of an arrogant young athlete - even if he has to go to hell and back to do it...' from the book cover. Review: Dwayne is a real ass and Spenser comes off as a great guy for taking care of him.. The plot was interesting. The author Robert B. Parker died in 2010. He was a masterful writer and with his spare style he presented dialog and action as few have. After his death somebody decided to continue his characters with other authors. It was, I think, a big mistake. The other authors as much as I have seen can't match Parker's skill with dialog or put the personality into the characters that Parker gave them. The books listed as "Robert B. Parker's" without Robert B. Parker are not worth the time to read. Parker's own works are a joy. In Playmates Spenser is hired to look into rumors of point shaving by Tufts University basketball players. The client is the Tufts Board of Trustees. Spenser does find that the allegations of corruption are true. He also finds that the main culprit has a chance to be one of the best players ever if he doesn't ruin it by throwing games and that this student can not read. How has he managed to get through three years of college with a 2.3 grade point average when he can't read. Spenser enlists the aid of his closest friends Hawk and Susan along with the usually appearing police and gym managers. Playmates is #16 in the Spenser series. The last Parker book I read, I can't remember the name, didn't interest me much, so I figured I'd never read another. But, this book was lying in a pile on the bedroom floor, and my spouse wants the pile sent to the church fair. Well, I should read it before recycling it, huh? So that's what I did. I found this book to be rather engaging. Sure, there was all the annoying cutsey flippancy and wearying, adolescent sexual innuendo, which are the primary reasons I'm not much interested in Parker books in general. But the book dealt with the cesspool of college sports, specifically college basketball quite well. Hey, it's "March Madness" time, so all the more reason to be reading this. Anyway, I thought it treated the subject reasonably well. I may actually break down and read another Parker book one of these days. no reviews | add a review
Belongs to SeriesSpenser (16) Is contained inDistinctions
Fiction.
Mystery.
HTML:Spenser smells corruption in a college town. Taft University's hottest basketball star is shaving points for quick cash. All manner of sleaze — from corrupt academics to hoods with graduate degrees — have their fingers in the pot. Spenser's search takes him from lecture halls to blue collar bars and finally into a bloody confrontation with almost certain death. But Spenser saves an arrogant young athlete — even though it nearly kills him to do it. "Spenser is a tough as they come and spiked with a touch of real class." (Kirkus Reviews.) 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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