Mystery novelist Robert Parker dies at 77

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One of my favorite authors....

May he Rest in Peace.



From boston.com.

By Bryan Marquard, Globe Staff

Robert B. Parker, whose spare, eloquent sentences turned the tough private investigator Spenser into one of Boston's most recognizable fictional characters, died in his Cambridge home Monday. He was 77.

robert.parker.jpg
Robert B. Parker (AP file photo/2006)

Publishing 65 books in 37 years, Mr. Parker was as prolific as he was well-read. He featured Spenser -- "spelled with an 's,' just like the English poet," he said -- in 37 detective novels. He also wrote 28 other books, including a series each for Jesse Stone, the police chief of fictional Paradise, Mass., and Sunny Randall, a female PI in Boston.

His latest book is "Split Image," part of the Jesse Stone series, and is due out next month, his agent, Helen Brann of New York City, said today.

Mr. Parker's marquee character became a TV series, "Spenser for Hire," starring Robert Urich. "Jesse Stone" became a TV vehicle for Tom Selleck, and "Appaloosa," his 2005 Western, was made into a 2008 movie directed by and starring Ed Harris.

"He was a master of the genre, as many have noted," said Brann, who has represented Mr. Parker for 42 years. "And he was the most fun, the most real, highly intelligent, witty, down-to-earth, warm, endearing guy I've ever known. I adored him."

Mr. Parker died at his writing desk, Brann said. Tests are pending, she added, but it appears that Mr. Parker suffered a heart attack Monday morning while his wife, Joan, was out of their house.

"She saw him early in the morning, went out for her exercise, came back an hour later, and he was gone," Brann said. "He was at his desk, as he so often was."

Pounding out up to five pages a day, Mr. Parker kept a pace few could match. Pressed for his secret, he made it sound simple.

"The art of writing a mystery is just the art of writing fiction," he told the Globe in 2007. "You create interesting characters and put them into interesting circumstances and figure out how to get them out of them. No one is usually surprised at the outcome of my books."

Perhaps, but millions of readers around the world raced through book after book.
In addition to his wife, with whom he shared a sprawling house in Cambridge walking distance from Harvard Square, Mr. Parker leaves two sons, David and Daniel.
 
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I also posted about this, but your thread is more detailed and informative. I suggest that we continue to post here.

I'll try to delete my thread.

I think I've read all of the Spenser, Sunny Randall, and Jesse Stone novels.

I think Tom Selleck did a good job as the TV movie version of Stone. The late Robert Urich was a superb Spenser.

I'll miss his writing.

I see that he achieved five pages a day. That's my goal in a book that I'm writing. It may sound easy, but it isn't...

T-Star
P.S. I couldn't delete my thread. Guess we'll have two, after all...
 
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OMIGOD!!! I'm in like a state of shock right now!

He can't die...he just CAN'T! What about Jesse and Sunny? They had just started a whole new relationship together. What about Spenser and Susan Silverman? Will they ever get married? What about Virgil Cole and Everett Hitch? What the hell man?

Nobody and I mean NOBODY was a bigger fan of Mr. Parker than I.

Rest ye o' Dean of detective fiction...I'll miss you. :(
 
Darn, I'm sorry to hear that. I really liked that fellow. A wonderful writer; has given me literally hunreds of hours of reading pleasure.
Sonny
 
I am very sad to hear this news. I just finished a Sunny Randall book, and started "Gunman's Rhapsody" last night. Mr. Parker was a master of what he did. In a few minutes I will be sitting down with a beer and his book. I will really miss the joy of finding new books of his.
 
I credit Parker for getting me to read for enjoyment. Never read anything more than I had to when I was a kid. My uncle gave me one of his copies of a Parker book when I was in high school and I was hooked.

Rest in peace Mr. Parker.
 
I credit Parker for getting me to read for enjoyment. Never read anything more than I had to when I was a kid. My uncle gave me one of his copies of a Parker book when I was in high school and I was hooked.

Rest in peace Mr. Parker.

Me too. I actually never read a book (without pictures) cover to cover before in my entire life.

Then I saw the movie Stone Cold with our good friend Tom Selleck as Jesse Stone. I enjoyed the movie so much, I went down to the local library, checked it out, read it front to back and have read almost every one of RBP's novels since.

Some of them twice, three and even four or five times!

I actually own every single one of the Jesse Stone novels as well as the Sunny Randall novels in paperback. Two others that I own and adore are All Our Yesterdays and Double Play. I also own Appaloosa and Resolution and when Brimstone makes it to paperback, I'll own it too.

I think I'm gonna cry.
 
One of my favorite authors, too. I'm sorry he's gone, but I'm glad there are still 15 or 20 of his novels that I haven't read. I guess the Kindle bill is going to go up this month.

Thanks for the books, Parker. I'm sorry there won't be more. I'm glad there are as many as there are.
 
First it was John D. Macdonald, now Robert B Parker, next will be Dick Francis. I've spent many many very enjoyable hours reading about Travis McGee, Spenser, and several jockeys and trainers solving various problems and all three of these writers had the capacity to do one thing very well, that is draw me into their stories so deeply that I couldn't put the books down until I had finished them. They will be greatly missed.

BTW, for those looking for someone new to read, Archer Mayor and Kate Shugak are two that are pretty good reads.
 
I also posted about this, but your thread is more detailed and informative. I suggest that we continue to post here.

I'll try to delete my thread.

I think I've read all of the Spenser, Sunny Randall, and Jesse Stone novels.

I think Tom Selleck did a good job as the TV movie version of Stone. The late Robert Urich was a superb Spenser.

I'll miss his writing.

I see that he achieved five pages a day. That's my goal in a book that I'm writing. It may sound easy, but it isn't...

T-Star
P.S. I couldn't delete my thread. Guess we'll have two, after all...

T-Star,

I didn't see your thread when I posted this one. Sorry about that... I agree that Tom Selleck's Jesse Stone is good and I wish Spenser For Hire was available to watch (the series, not the movies).



I am a huge Parker fan, Spenser and Hawk are always entertaining as is Sunny Randall and Jesse Stone. My latest captivity was with Virgil Cole and Everett Hitch. I was hoping for a handful of follow-ups with those two.

We've all lost a good author, but I am thankful for what we got from Mr. Parker before his untimely death.
 
Wilbur Smith and Jack Higgins are about Parker's age. I fear that we'll lose them soon, too. Tony Hillerman died a couple of years ago.

John Sanford is no spring chicken, but I think he'll be writing his "Prey" series for a few years to come. I don't really like his characters as well as I do some of those by other writers, but they're good enough to read.

T-Star
 
"I'll miss his writing.

"I see that he achieved five pages a day. That's my goal in a book that I'm writing. It may sound easy, but it isn't.."


You've got that right, T-Star. I've been writing freelance fiction for more than 30 years--and on a good day I'll knock out maybe three pages. But writing fiction is always 20 parts musing to one part key-tapping, especially in the initial drafting stages.

I met Parker once at an event in Boston. He was gracious and friendly.

---

THE ERRAND BOY (Three Rivers Press), third novel in the Hector Bellevance literary suspense series, is available wherever books are sold.
 
I will miss him. For me i was hooked in "The Judas Goat" when he asked the English kid there to kill him his name and he replied "suck my a##" For the next 3 pages he referred to the kid as "suck".
I had great hopes for Donald Harstsad but he hasn't published anything since 05, Chuck Logan is another. Lee Child and randy Wayne White fill markets but Parker actually made me want to visit the NE.
 
"I'll miss his writing.

"I see that he achieved five pages a day. That's my goal in a book that I'm writing. It may sound easy, but it isn't.."


You've got that right, T-Star. I've been writing freelance fiction for more than 30 years--and on a good day I'll knock out maybe three pages. But writing fiction is always 20 parts musing to one part key-tapping, especially in the initial drafting stages.

I met Parker once at an event in Boston. He was gracious and friendly.

---

THE ERRAND BOY (Three Rivers Press), third novel in the Hector Bellevance literary suspense series, is available wherever books are sold.


David Lindsey is probably the most literate detective writer, who aimed at a more cerebral class of reader than some. You can read sample chapters on his site, www.davidlindsey.com He hasn't had a book out for several years, but if you can find his stuff, it is terrific in the best examples. Many libraries will have copies. He used Houston as Parker did Boston, adding a lot to the books. He also used St.Petersburg, Russia in the opening of one book, so well that I could see it. Here's the opening of his, "Mercy" http://www.davidlindsey.com/novels/Mercy_1.aspx If you've been to Houston, can't you just SEE that scene? Feel the heat, the humidity, and the glare off of the buildings? And his description of Detective Carmen Palma is very vivid.

I met him at a signing some years ago, and my son asked if it was easy to write. He thought and said, "No. It's hard." But he did it so very well!

I've written enough that I've learned to do dialogue, one of the hardest things for some writers. I just imagine myself standing invisibly, watching the characters as they speak and notice what they're doing, once I think of the basic scene. It helps, of course, to know your characters well. David Lindsey and the other really good ones use words to paint images so real that you can read the book and visualize just what's taking place, as if the book was a film.

Parker used Boston well, and we all got to know Spenser and Susan so well that we knew about how they'd speak. Frankly, I never really liked Susan Silverman. She was too prissy and a snob. But we never doubted that Spenser cared for her! Theirs was one of the best romances in all fiction, I suspect.

Bellevance, I'll look for your books.

T-Star
 
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