One for the Money (Stephanie Plum, No. 1)

by Janet Evanovich

2003

Status

Available

Publication

St. Martin's Press (2003), Edition: Revised ed., 352 pages

Description

Fiction. Mystery. Humor (Fiction.) HTML:Discover where it all beganā??#1 New York Times bestselling author Janet Evanovich's first "snappily written, fast-paced, and witty" (USA TODAY) novel in the beloved Stephanie Plum series featuring a feisty and funny heroine who "comes roaring in like a blast of very fresh air" (The Washington Post). Meet Stephanie Plum, a bounty hunter with attitude. In Stephanie's opinion, toxic waste, rabid drivers, armed schizophrenics, and August heat, humidity, and hydrocarbons are all part of the great adventure of living in Jersey. She's a product of the "burg," a blue-collar pocket of Trenton where houses are attached and narrow, cars are American, windows are clean, and (God forbid you should be late) dinner is served at six. Out of work and out of money, Stephanie blackmails her bail-bondsman cousin Vinnie into giving her a try as an apprehension agent. Stephanie knows zilch about the job requirements, but she figures her new pal, el-primo bounty hunter Ranger, can teach her what it takes to catch a crook. Her first assignment: nail Joe Morelli, a former vice cop on the run from a charge of murder one. Morelli's the inamorato who charmed Stephanie out of her virginity at age sixteen. There's still powerful chemistry between them, so the chase should be interesting...and could also be extremely dangero… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member bragan
The first volume in Janet Evanovich's ridiculously popular Stephanie Plum series. In this initial installment our hero, desperate for cash after losing her job, turns to her cousin Vinne the bail bondsman for employment, thus embarking on her new career as a bounty hunter, a job for which she is
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woefully unequipped. And then it turns out that her first target is a man she had a one-night (or, more accurately, one-hour) stand with in high school, and that he's determined not to get caught until he's proved himself innocent.

This series was recommended to me as sheer brain candy, and that's probably about right. It's a quick, easy, but not particularly impressive or memorable read that worked fairly nicely as a palate cleanser between more serious books. I will say that although there are some lighthearted aspects to it -- Plum's family are pure comic relief, for instance -- overall it was less of a fun romp than I was expecting. There's a general air of sleaziness about the whole thing, and it features some very dark elements of sexual violence.

If I hadn't already picked up most of the rest of this series at a library sale, I'm not sure if I'd bother seeking out the next one, but since I have, I'll continue on with it the next time I want something this particular variety of mindless.
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LibraryThing member rfewell
People always talk about how funny this series is... I just couldn't get into it...
LibraryThing member tangential1
I was really prepared to hate this book just on the garish cover design, but it was surprisingly awesome. Really funny and a good mystery to boot. It definitely isn't the most thought intensive book out there, but sometimes brain candy is what you are looking for and this book was perfect brain
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candy. I would recommend it for anyone looking for a good laid back summer read.

One warning, though: this book (as with the rest of this series, I'm finding) really cries out to be read in large chunks. Not a book to read 20 pages here or there on the bus; much better as a weekend by the pool or beach book.
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LibraryThing member nocto
Zzzzz. I was probably expecting too much of this. I just didn't get it at all; vaguely amusing in places but Stephanie's incompetence just grated on my nerves. I've only actually read half of the book, I might get around to the second half but it's not a priority.
LibraryThing member thekoolaidmom
From the first line of the book, "There are some men who enter a woman's life and screw it up forever." and straight through to the end, Janet Evanovich's "One for the Money" is a riotous pleasure.

Stephanie Plum has been out of work for six months: her car's been repoed, she's sold her furture and
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pawned her jewelry for bill money, and is reduced to sampling the hampster's food pellets anddrinking beer for breakfast. When she finds out she can make $10,000 as a bounty hunter AND get revenge by bringing in the man who did her wrong, at the same time, she's in. But, as life would have it, nothing's ever that easy.

My first experience with Evanovich was "Plum Lucky." I've never laughed at any book as much as that, and so I decided to give Plum a run from the beginning. Of course, when you start with the end then go back to the start, you go from well established characters, Plum Lucky is the 15th or so in the Plum novels, and go back to when author and writer are just feeling them out. All things considered, One for the Money is definately worthy of all the praise it's received, and all the sequels that have followed.

One for the Money is most likely considered Chick Lit, and I suppose that's okay, but I think guys couldn't help enjoying it, as well. Stephanie Plum is brash, outspoken, and humorous, and the reader is quickly compelled to care about her. She is definately not perfect, she's definately no "Wonder Women" and she knows it, but she's tenacious and is quick to admit she's screwed up and learn from it. And Stephanie is not the only great character in the book. There's also Lula, Connie, Stephanie's Mom, Joe Morelli (the man who screwed up her life,) Vinnie (what DID he do with the duck????), but my favorite Plum novels character is Grandma Mazur. When Grandma Mazur shot the chicken at the dinner table while Stephanie's mom is trying to play matchmaker with Bernie the appliance salesman as dinner guest, I laughed so hard I completely lost it.
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LibraryThing member aleahmarie
Stephanie Plum is a spunky, independent Jersey girl who's down on her luck. Laid off from her job as an underwear buyer, Stephanie's having a hard time making ends meet. She's already pawned off most of her possessions and her car was just repoed. In a fit of desperation she turns to her shady
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cousin, Vinnie. Through a comedy of errors she finds herself under his employment as a "recovery agent." Her first order of business is to bring in sultry cop turned murderer Joe Morelli.

Evanovich's characters are about as deep as a puddle -- but fun none-the-less. If you're the sort who enjoys complex plots and intricate character development this isn't the book for you. If you've come for a giggle and a bit of literary escapism, this may be your stop. A predictable, fast-paced story line carries the reader from start to finish in no time with lots of guffaws along the way. While aspects of the plot could certainly be considered dark, Evanovich manages to avoid the grisly details and barrels on through toward the picture perfect ending. Just the thing for fans of chick lit or light-hearted mysteries.
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LibraryThing member ZosiaCanberra
This book mightn't quite deserve five stars, but the Good Lord up there in the sky has bestowed me with the ability to give whatever rating I want, and five is what I choose. This is one of those stories that can only be explained through quotes ā€“ ...more This book mightn't quite deserve five
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stars, but the Good Lord up there in the sky has bestowed me with the ability to give whatever rating I want, and five is what I choose. This is one of those stories that can only be explained through quotes ā€“ Stephanie is unbelievably quotable ā€“ so be prepared.

I donā€™t even know what this series is. Crime? Mystery? Comedy? A bit of everything put together? Stephanie Plum, brand new, untrained bounty hunter from New Jersey has been in print for decades and in dozens of stories. Soon thereā€™ll also be a movie. So Iā€™ve finally settled down to read the series.

The book begins with a few pages Iā€™d rather forget. As a child, Joe does something disgusting to Stephanie, and then some years later she deliberately runs him over with her car. Iā€™d read that much of the book a few years ago and then put it down because I wasnā€™t sure I wanted to read about characters who did things like that. But put those incidents out of your mind because the rest of the book is great.

When we meet Stephanie she is completely broke, and selling off her possessions one by one as she tries not to be evicted. She falls into Vinnie, her cousinā€™s bounty hunting business out of desperation (and by blackmailing her way into the job).

I took a deep breath and leaned close to Vinnie, whispering in his ear. "I know about Madam Zaretski and her whips and chains. I know about the boys. And I know about the duck."

Stephanie is enticed by the promise of a big fee if she can bring in Joe Morelli ā€“ the man whoā€™s been a thorn in her side since she was six and he was eight.

I put a hand to the desk to steady myself. "Ten thousand dollars for finding one guy? What's the catch?"
"Sometimes they don't want to be found, and they shoot at you. But that hardly ever happens."

Morelli is a cop whoā€™s been wrongly accused of murder, and it turns out Stephanie isnā€™t good enough at her job yet to bring him in ā€“ so they end up working together.
Morelli doesnā€™t take Stephanieā€™s determination to bring him in seriously. In fact, nobody does.

I shoved my hand into my shoulder bag, pulled out my revolver, and jabbed Morelli in the chest with it. "You're under arrest."
His eyes opened wide in astonishment. "You have a gun! Why didn't you use it on Ramirez? Jesus, you hit him with your pocketbook like some sissy girl. Why the hell didn't you use your damn gun?"

Weā€™re introduced to a cast of characters along the way ā€“ characters who will play bigger parts as the series goes on. Characters including the widely-loved Ranger ā€“ a man whoā€™s slightly more adept at Stephanieā€™s new profession than Stephanie is.

You have a permit to carry a concealed weapon?"
"Yes." And I was at least ten percent convinced it was legal.
"Where'd you get your permit?"
"Ranger got it for me."
"Ranger MaƱoso? Christ, he probably made it in his cellar." He shook out the bullets and gave the gun back to me. "Find a new job.ā€

The best thing about this series is the atmosphere. This is working-class, multi-ethnic New Jersey and the characters operating in the area are all so unique and entertaining. We can feel the heat of the place, and really feel like we're seeing the rundown locations the characters visit. The dialogue is hilarious, and Stephanieā€™s ā€˜voiceā€™ is just the right balance of humour and emotion that keeps you reading.

However, I donā€™t think the grandmother was as entertaining as sheā€™s supposed to be ā€“ thereā€™s eccentric and then thereā€™s over the top. I know all about crazy Eastern European grandmothers, but loading a gun and shooting the dinner? Thatā€™s a bit too crazy for me.

Itā€™s so great watching Stephanie dive in without a clue, getting anything and everything wrong, and yet still stumbling on, determined to make this work. Itā€™s impossible not like her, and not to cheer her on.
Of course she comes through in the end.

"Hello," I called, gun now in hand, barely able to hear myself over the pounding of my heart. "Who's here?"
Morelli sauntered out of the kitchen. "Just me. Put the gun away. We need to talk."
"Jesus! You are so fucking arrogant. Did it ever occur to you I might shoot you with this gun?"
"No. It never occurred to me."

ā€œWhat the hell kind of outfit were you supposed to be wearing?"
"It was my slut outfit. I wanted to speed things up."

Just get it over with, I told myself. Barge right in, check under the bed for rapists, pull on some rubber gloves, and clean up the mess.

The unconventional partnership between Stephanie and Morelli runs through the entire book, with moments where theyā€™re furious with each other and moments where theyā€™re so great ā€“ watching each otherā€™s backs. Stephanieā€™s vehicleā€™s been repossessed, and her replacement only occasionally works, so she takes it upon herself to ā€˜look afterā€™ Morelliā€™s much fancier car.

"I didn't want anyone to steal your car," I said. "So I had an alarm installed."
"It wasn't 'anyone' you were worried about. It was me. You had a goddamn alarm installed in my goddamn car so I couldn't snatch it out from under you!"
"It worked, too. What were you doing in our car?"

The setting is a place where everybody knows everybody, and they all know each otherā€™s business. Police officers are married to relatives, who have friends who work in the businesses in the shopping areas. Evanovich creates a community with seemingly little effort; Stephanie operates in her community like it really exists. It was so well done.

ā€œThe car belongs to Morelli."
"Oh boy," Dorsey said. "I can hardly wait to hear this."
I figured I'd embellish the truth a little, since the police might not be up on the finer points of bounty hunterism and might not understand about commandeering.

I will definitely be continuing with this series ā€“ in fact I started the second book just minutes after finishing the first. That should tell you something.
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LibraryThing member Bookmarque
Well another good try at a strong female lead but alas, she is also dopey. I hope she gets smarter. Granted, she hasnā€™t been a bounty hunter before but youā€™d think that someone born and raised in New Jersey would have better survival skills. Every time she tries to do something, she ends up
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screwing it up. Like when she goes after her second FTA (Failed To Appear) and just thinks that by asking nicely, heā€™ll come with her. Instead he grabs her purse and threatens her with her own gun. So another bounty hunter has to come and bail her out and he ends up getting shot.

Morelli is actually not guilty of the crime heā€™s accused of and he makes Stephanie a bargain that if she helps him find the missing witness to his supposed crime, heā€™ll let her bring him in and collect the $10,000 bounty on him. So she does and they indeed figure it out, but when they find the witness heā€™s frozen solid. But as luck would have it, the gun that will vindicate Morelli is also found and it does prove that he fired on the dead guy in self-defense.

I may try another but I hope that Stephanie gets a clue soon.
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LibraryThing member LisaMaria_C
I know some don't like the first person point of view, which is why I try to note its use in reviews, but I for one love it when it's used well, because a really distinctive, characterful voice can often float you above even mediocre plots. That's the case with Evanovich's Stephanie Plum. She makes
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stupid mistakes and I wonder about the plausibility of everything from the premise to many a coincidence--Plum makes at first blush a very unlikely (and inept) bounty hunter.

But the voice is so engaging, there's lots of witty, snappy dialogue, lines that zing, colorful secondary characters and a sense of place. In this case, Trenton, New Jersey, the kind of place any New York City native like me loves to snark at, and Evanovich brings it to life as a community. Everywhere she goes, there are convenient relatives, inlaws and former schoolmates to lend her a hand.

This is fluff basically, and I know it. Fluff with a chicklit feel. But sometimes fluff is what you want, and I rather enjoyed adventures with Stephanie, even if I suspect she won't wear well if she doesn't prove a fast learner in the future books. Although she has a lot of grit, and in this book she's brand new to the business of running down fugitives, Too Stupid to Live heroines who have to be rescued by the guy they're pursuing (in more ways then one) are not my cuppa.
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LibraryThing member brokenangelkisses
This book is the first in a series featuring bounty hunter Stephanie Plum. It was published in 1994 and proved very popular. There are now at least 17 books in the series focused around Stephanieā€™s adventures as a bail bond enforcer. Although these are sold as crime / mystery stories, they are
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very comic and are more about the entertainment than the central crimes they feature.

Money, money, money

Stephanie Plum needs money. Sheā€™s lost her job and is about to lose her car. Worse, her apartment is rapidly becoming furniture-free. Desperate times call for desperate measures so Stephanie talks her low-life cousin Vinnie into giving her a job. He wants her filing safely in the office, but when she realises the money available for bringing in Failure to Appears Stephanie insists on a more high profile role.

Her first assignment: bring in Joe Morelli, local cop turned homicide suspect. Experienced cop turned outlaw vs. ex-lingerie saleswoman? No problem. Although Stephanie and Joe have a history involving a bakery floor, her lost virginity and a sort-of hit-and-run, this is definitely going to remain professionalā€¦

Unfortunately, during the course of her investigations Stephanie attracts the attention of Benito Ramirez, a violent boxing champion with a passion for hurting women. Who can protect her from Ramirez? Morelli could, but she needs to turn him inā€¦

Life in the burg

From the start, I found the writing often made me laugh out loud. A trip to her parentsā€™ home for dinner prompts the comment that: ā€œThe clock on the dashboard told me I was seven minutes late, and the urge to scream told me I was home.ā€ The first person narration helps to create a self-effacing persona and an often very entertaining narrative as Stephanie tries to balance visiting her mother, earning a living and not getting herself killed.

Stephanie isnā€™t the worldā€™s greatest bounty hunter, which can lead to some difficulties (like a suspect using her bullets to arm himself) and sheā€™s not that keen on shooting people, which means that her gun is really more for decoration than protection. She manages to survive using a combination of luck, more luck and help from two men: the mysterious Ranger and the equally devious but more outwardly respectable Morelli. These two are core characters in the later books and their relationships with Stephanie are well established here ā€“ they offer a wryly amused helping hand combined with a hefty dose of flirtation and a smidgeon of shock at Stephanieā€™s latest predicament. In fact, their roles are fairly indistinguishable and just mean that Stephanie has two helpers to call upon. She isnā€™t exactly a feminist whoā€™s keen to be doing it for herself and is quite happy to accept a bit of support. More importantly, the scene is set for a love triangle to develop in later books.

The story is populated with other entertaining characters. Vinnie, Stephanieā€™s cousin, is susceptible to blackmail because of his doings with a duck. Grandma Mazur is convinced that she could be a bounty hunter, too, to the despair of Stephanieā€™s long suffering parents, and Stephanieā€™s date just wants to sell her home appliances. It is impossible to take any of the characters seriously as they are all very one-dimensional. This has the positive side-effect that serious injuries donā€™t seem that terrible as the reader has not built up a connection with these characters.

There is a sense of danger in the book and at least one character is very badly hurt, but Stephanie is the kind of character who will only ever be badly hurt enough to warrant a trip to A&E when the actionā€™s over. This means that even when Stephanie is tense the reader can be fairly relaxed, albeit wondering incredulously how she will escape from her latest predicament. Meanwhile, there is plenty to entertain, from the police pool betting on when Stephanie will put out for Morelli, to Morelliā€™s shock when Stephanie ā€˜commandersā€™ his car, to Stephanieā€™s horror when she accidentally answers Morelliā€™s phone to Morelliā€™s grandmother.

There is a large dose of family fun thrown in, too, as Stephanie regularly visits her parentsā€™ house for free food and a lecture on her career choice. The family dynamics are recognisable to anyone whoā€™s been a mother or a daughter and are enjoyably predictableā€¦enjoyable mostly because itā€™s someone else getting irritated! The humour is farce and slapstick, with each instalment in the series working almost like an extended sitcom episode. The pace is quick and thereā€™s plenty happening throughout the book. The crime itself it suitably resolved and, although it is the start of a series, this is easy to read as a standalone book.

Conclusions

Action packed and often laugh-out-loud funny this is chick lit with a dose of Serious Stuff. Read it for the daft events, odd musings and odder twists. This is recommended for readers who like their crime to be comic. Probably slightly less suitable for feminists and those who take prostitution (known as ā€˜being a hoā€™ in these books) seriously. This can be read as a standalone book but the rest of the series is equally entertaining, so if you like this youā€™ll probably like the rest. I think it is definitely worth the Ā£5.99 RRP especially since (once youā€™ve read the rest of the series and forgotten how it all started) this is worth re-reading for the details you forgot and the details you remembered with a slightly incredulous smile. This is at least a second reading for me and it hasnā€™t made it to the charity shop yet. Need more convincing? It won the Crime Writersā€™ Association John Creasy Memorial Dagger. Whatever that is.

This edition features 290 pages of entertainment in a slightly small font, available from a mere penny (plus P&P) second hand on Amazon.
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LibraryThing member whiskeyandbooks
This book was HILARIOUS! I love strong, sarcastic women for heroines, and I especially love when they don't get sidetracked by useless love interests, or need saving by a hero. Perfect read!
LibraryThing member readingwithtea
ā€œI attributed the incident to temporary insanity, and in my own defence, Iā€™d like to say I havenā€™t run over anyone since.ā€

In this first of the Stephanie Plum series, now up to 17 instalments, Stephanie has lost her job as a discount lingerie saleswoman, her car has been repossessed, and her
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flat is running out of things to sell. She takes a job as a recovery agent for her cousin, who runs a bail-bond company, and her first assignment is to bring in ā€œvice cop turned outlawā€ Joe Morelli, whom she knows all too well from high school.

This series comes highly recommended by many bloggers, and this feels like a very rocky but promising start to a series, much like STORM FRONT did recently. Stephanieā€™s a pretty strong character, although Iā€™m used to Kinsey Millhone and V.I. Warshawski from Sue Grafton and Sara Paretskyā€™s books respectively, so compared to them sheā€™s a bit of a wuss. Itā€™s a very steep learning curve from underwear sales to bond recovery agent and it is pleasing to see Stephanie go through this, that sheā€™s not magically catapulted into the hard-bitten criminal world knowing everything.That said, she is gifted with a bulls-eye shot and a certain amount of savvy which seem a little incongruous for a lingerie saleswoman who lost her job and couldnā€™t find a new one.

Evanovich has put together a cracking set of characters. Stephanie herself is going to take some work, but I loved her family ā€“ the difficult, match-making mother, the grandmother who wants Stephanieā€™s hot pants and gun and gets hold of both (much hilarity ensues), the grumpy father who doesnā€™t really do anything. The close-knit family-based community reminded me very strongly of the neighbourhoods in the V.I. Warshawski novels. Joe Morelli is quite a character too and Iā€™m glad that heā€™s going to be coming back ā€“ he seems a pretty honourable gentleman with a solid combative streak that will see him tussling with Stephanie for a while to come.

Plot was a little thin on the ground, as there wasnā€™t much of a mystery to solve, but the writing is exciting if not high-falutinā€™ and there are some good sub-plots with potential to stretch over several books (particularly the Benito Ramirez strand). I was a bit surprised at the coarseness and brutality of some of the occurrences and descriptions (not sure why ā€“ Vic and Kinsey are just as bad).

All in all, not brilliant as a standalone, but Iā€™ll be following up at least to number 2 in the series to see how Stephanie gets on.
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LibraryThing member MonicaLynn
I truly enjoyed this funny, witty, murder mystery. Stephanie Plum is out of a job and her mother suggests going to do filing for her cousin Vinnie, when Stephanie arrives the job is taken already. However there are always openings for Bounty Hunters. Not nowing anything Stephanie takes the job and
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has quite a rough go of it. With no money for supplies and not having a clue how to do anything. She finds herself in quite a few pickles. Joe Morrelli the highest paying bond and her goal for the monent is a guy she knew in high school that she has well quite a few mixed feelings about. Joe was a cop and accused of cold blooded murder of a man who was supposedly unarmed. During this enjoyable book, Stephanie has to deal with Joe the accused murderer, Ranger another bail bondsmen who is quite good but a little cocky, Ramierez a boxer who is also a rapist and murder as well as several other characters that make this story interesting.
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LibraryThing member gemilyinterrupted
it was pretty easy reading for a holiday time. made me laugh a few times. don't know if i need bother with whatever 'two' is.
LibraryThing member Awfki
It was okay. Just good enough to keep me reading though there were gaps where I didn't pick it up for a while and I might have walked away but there wasn't anything else handy. A very light, not especially interesting sort of mystery.
LibraryThing member annaleeblysse
I haven't laughed so much while reading a book for a long time! This book is full of great characters that are fun to read about. I first got the recommendation to read the Stephanie Plum series a few years back from a clerk at the book store after she caught me picking out romantic suspense, but I
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tend to read more from the "romance genre" so I waited awhile before trying. I've only read two in the series so far, and so far the developing relationship between Plum and Joe Morelli sure is pulling me in. This is a great book for readers who enjoy laughing, a mystery, and a bit of romance.
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LibraryThing member readingraven
I enjoyed it. It was a light and fun read. My mom recommended it and I'm glad I read it. I do not plan to buy anymore at full price though -- if I ever made it to the library, these would be great library fodder. As it is, I'll see if I can borrow them from my sister! I think she owns them all.
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But, still, a light read that took me around 4 hours to get through.
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LibraryThing member SherryeW
The first novel in the Stephanie Plum series. The author has a wonderful writing style: funny, fast-paced, romantic and true-to-life. This book catches your interest and makes you want to continue the rest of the series. Great characters!
LibraryThing member celticstar
Excellent start to a series, I'd heard a lot about the Stephanie Plum books and I wasn't disappointed.
LibraryThing member MsBeautiful
Fun, fasting moving book with interesting characters and story lines
LibraryThing member moonriver
I really wanted to like this book. I'd read a lot of good stuff about Janet Evanovich's books and that the Stephanie Plum series is hilarious, so I got this thinking I would like it. It had it's funny moments (few), but perhaps the problem is that I don't usually like mystery/crime novels. I think
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my expectations for this book were way too high. The main character, Stephanie Plum, annoyed the hell out of me, and while I've read books with characters that make me go "arghhh" in frustration this one just made me want to smack her for being such an idiot. I didn't like her, I didn't sympathize with her, and just a few pages into the book I wanted to stop reading it, which is never good. I kept reading hoping it would get better, but it never did. I won't be reading the rest of the series.
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LibraryThing member kikianika
I finally caved in and had a look at this much-lauded series. I can definitely see what all the fuss is about. The heroine is awesome! But I rally don't get how anyone could like morelli. Maybe their childhood experience hit a bit too close to home for comfort, but if I were to run into a man like
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him again after all this time, I'd do more than run him over, let me assure you! Her chick-litty clumsiness is adorable. I'll keep rading he for a bit more.
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LibraryThing member mrgreg
This is just a rollicking good beach read. Not for those with no sense of humor.
LibraryThing member krsball
My sister introduced me to this series and I will be forever grateful (thanks Kin!). So funny and off-beat!
LibraryThing member debbiescurlsandswirl
Once you start your hooked. From almost page one I started laughing and didn't stop until I finished the book. Yes, once I picked this book up I read until I finished it. Nothing else got done...no housework, cooking, etc. And can't wait for the next book, and the next book, and I hope she never
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stops writing this series although I realize all good things must come to an end. I can't imagine making a movie out of this book as I probably would be disappointed if my image of what the characters should look and sound like aren't the same as what or who they use for these characters.
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Awards

Anthony Award (Nominee — Novel — 1995)
Dilys Award (Winner — 1995)
Shamus Award (Shortlist — 1995)

Language

Original language

English

Original publication date

1994-08-26

Physical description

352 p.; 4.24 inches

ISBN

0312990456 / 9780312990459

Barcode

1602460
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