I guess I'll also try to minimally rate the books with a star system. I'll never even bother with one star, because I wouldn't finish a book that I'd give that rating to. Two stars will be for a book that's just barely finishable, probably because it's part of a series, or has some compensating strength apart from its plot, character, or writing flaws. Three stars will mean I think a person who likes that kind of book would enjoy it. Four stars are for a book that is very good for it's type. Five stars means I think the book transcends its genre to be among the very good books of any type.
I liked Mike Lupica's Miracle on 49th Street because I am a basketball fan, a Celtics fan, a fan of YA lit, and a father of a teenage girl. ***
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Richard Stark is the name Donald Westlake uses when he writes serious crime books. A few years ago I decided I generally prefer my formula crime books to be serious. Stark writes about Parker, a professional thief. This book comes immediately on the heels of Nobody Runs Forever and Parker is in deep trouble in upstate New York. Reliably intense. ***
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I'm forty pages from being done with Sebastian Junger's A Death in Belmont. Very solid nonfiction with a personal connection to the Boston Strangler case. ***
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