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Finger Lickin' Fifteen (Stephanie Plum Novels) |  | Author: Janet Evanovich Publisher: St. Martin's Press Category: Book
List Price: $27.95 Buy Used: $1.90 as of 3/19/2010 11:08 CDT details You Save: $26.05 (93%)
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Seller: gwspokanebooks Rating: 466 reviews Sales Rank: 2816
Media: Hardcover Edition: 1 Pages: 308 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.1 Dimensions (in): 9.3 x 6.4 x 1.3
ISBN: 0312383282 Dewey Decimal Number: 813.54 EAN: 9780312383282 ASIN: 0312383282
Publication Date: June 23, 2009 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| • | ISBN13: 9780312383282 | | • | Condition: NEW | | • | Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark. |
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Amazon.com Review Book Description SAVE THE DATE: Tuesday, June 23, 2009 EVENT: The next Stephanie Plum novel, in which complications arise, loyalties are tested, cliffhangers are resolved, and donuts are eaten. WHERE: Wherever books are sold across America WHAT TO BRING: Sunglasses, insect repellant, a flotation device, suntan lotion, cheez-doodles, extra-large towel, fire extinguisher, baseball bat, lip balm, monkey leash, sixty three pieces of chewing gum, and one canister of oxygen (don’t ask). Hey, it’s a Stephanie Plum novel! Janet Evanovich and Michael Connelly: Author One-to-One In this Amazon exclusive, we brought together blockbuster authors Janet Evanovich and Michael Connelly and asked them to interview each other. Find out what two of the top authors of their genres have to say about their characters, writing process, and more. Michael Connelly is the bestselling author of the Harry Bosch series of novels as well as The Poet, Blood Work, Void Moon, Chasing the Dime, and the #1 New York Times bestseller The Lincoln Lawyer. He is a former newspaper reporter who has won numerous awards for his journalism and his novels. Read on to see Michael Connelly's questions for Janet Evanovich, or turn the tables to see what Evanovich asked Connelly. Connelly: Let's get the business out of the way. What's Finger Lickin' Fifteen, the new Stephanie Plum novel, all about and what brought you to the story? Evanovich: I wanted to do a book that featured Stephanie's wheelman, Lula. Lula is one of my favorite characters because she's pulled herself up from hard times and now is just more of everything. Fifteen opens with Lula witnessing a crime, and it all gets complicated after that. We're talking about barbecue gone bad, cross-dressing firemen, dancing hot dogs, etc. Connelly: You strike me as an author who is involved in every aspect of the publishing of her work. But the output--at least two solid novels a year--suggests otherwise, that you delegate all over the place so that you can focus on writing high-quality stuff. So which is it? (And if your answer is that you do indeed delegate, how the heck do you learn to do that?) Evanovich: You reach a point in your career where the business side threatens to eclipse writing time and you either delegate or power back. I delegate everything but the writing. My daughter and her staff manage the website, the fan mail, the book tour, the author publicity and marketing. My son is my agent and finance officer and chief problem solver. When no one else can solve the problem it gets dumped on my son's desk! I oversee all aspects, but I've had to learn not to micro-manage. Connelly: We have an author friend in common-- Robert Crais--who has steadfastly refused to sell or option his series character Elvis Cole to Hollywood. On the other hand, I've flogged Harry Bosch up and down the studio strip. (Interestingly enough, to the same effect--no movies made!) Where do you stand with Stephanie and will we ever see her on the big or small screen? Evanovich: Jeez Louise, I wish I knew the answer to this one. TriStar owns the Plum franchise with Wendy Finerman attached as producer, and Wendy has been trying to get this sucker off the ground for fifteen years. Probably somewhere in the vicinity of three million people read each of my Plum books, but for whatever reason, TriStar has yet to greenlight the project. Connelly: Speaking of that L.A. business, do you remember when we first met? Since you conveniently put numbers in your titles, it is easy for me to remember that it was fourteen years ago in L.A. I bet you don't remember the name of the restaurant, which sadly is no longer there. But, luckily, we're still here and my memory of that lunch is important to me because at the time we had probably sold a hundred books between us (not counting romance novels). Evanovich: What I remember is that what I consider to be my graduating class (you, Crais, and Jan Burke) would get together at all the mystery conferences, and you would be our fearless leader! Connelly: Did you know that in my most recent novel a very bad man plans to use a Janet Evanovich novel to get close to an unsuspecting, potential victim? It's scary stuff--the plan, not the Evanovich novel. Have you reached a stage where your work is part of the terrain and gets these sorts of little nods here and there? Evanovich: Every now and then my name or one of my character names pops up and it's usually in the work of a friend. I think it's fun and I always reciprocate...so live in fear.
Product Description
Stephanie’s working overtime tracking felons for the bonds office at night and snooping for security expert Carlos Manoso, aka Ranger, during the day. Can she hunt down two killers, a traitor, and five skips, keep her grandmother out of the sauce, and solve Ranger’s problems and not jump his bones?
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Showing reviews 1-5 of 466
What's Your All Time Favorite Stephanie Plum book? March 16, 2010 barbara silkstone (Florida, USA) 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
Finger Lickin' Fifteen (Stephanie Plum Novels)
Okay... it's really hard to keep up the pace even for someone like Stephanie. Eventually you learn all the lessons you were meant to learn. I roared through 2, 3 and 4. Loved 5 and 6. Anyone have an all-time favorite? I can't remember which one it was, but Stephanie used Ranger's apartment as a hideout. Help me here. My salute to Stephanie is Alice Harte in my Kindle book: The Secret Diary of Alice in Wonderland, Age 42 and Three-Quarters. Alice would love to hang out Stephanie for a bit. The Secret Diary of Alice in Wonderland, Age 42 and Three-Quarters Barbara Silkstone
So much fun! March 16, 2010 Life After Jane (Hattiesburg, MS) 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
Stephanie Plum, I-Love-Lucy becomes a bounty hunter, has been getting herself into some seriously deadly binds and blowing up her vehicles for 14 straight books now. You can count on Janet Evanovich, she will always give you at least one death, many death threats, one cross dresser, several acts of unwanted nudity, a spandex clad oversized ex-prostitute, a car bomb, a hamster and two of the hottest men ever written in each and every book. You can bank on it. Only this time, the death, the death threats, the cross dresser, the car bomb all revolved around Lula- the spandex clad oversized ex-prostitute. It must have been a nice change for Stephanie who has almost died fourteen times now. The repetition in the series isn't a hindrance, it's a selling point since it's the most entertaining mix of circumstances. Evanovich always delivers and bless her heart, Stephanie always gets her man (maybe even two of them).
Lula witnesses the brutal murder of a television chef famous for his smoking hot barbecue sauce. When the killers find out that there was an eye witness to their dirty deed Lula becomes their next target. Any rational sane person would be scared witless and hiding out to save her ass but not our girl. She enters the barbecue sauce cook off that Chipotle (the chef) was suppose to enter in hopes of catching the murders who have a very nice one million dollar finders fee on their heads.
Stephanie and Morelli are not currently speaking to each other, having had a very heated discussion about peanut butter and what should be in it that lead to their most recent separation. Short on cash, Stephanie returns to Rangeman, the security service company owned by the mysterious, elusive DROP FREAKIN' DEAD SMOKIN' HOT Ranger, to do a little inside snooping. Several Rangeman accounts have been compromised and if he doesn't put a stop to the leaks fast, it could put a serious damper on his business.
Throw in a fireman in a Julia Child outfit with a dash of Grandma Mazur and you've got five hours of hysteria that might just upset your neighbors.
Horrible March 15, 2010 C. L. H. 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
This book was HORRIBLE. The story line was weak. I saw a lot of people complaining that the book was too much about Lula. In my opinion it is not that the book revolved too much around her as that fact that JE seems to go out of her way to make Lula seem like the most riduiculous person. Who wants to read page after page about a grown woman's flatulance? While Stephanie, Joe and Ranger all have many sides to their Character. The rest of the characters (especially Lulu) seem to have little to no depth. She does not give the slightest detail about any important points in her life. In 14 she was engaged (though in a pathetic way, befitting the pathetic nature of her character) in 15 she just "wasn't". No explaination, and no hint of emotion about it from her or her ex-fiance. If you are going to focus so much on a character, the charcter should be a person and more than a bad and offensive punchline.
Another reviewer said that Lula needs to die. I think that she could be a good character, but if JE is unwilling or unable to put the needed development into her, then fine, kill her off. It is better for her give her up than to let her live her literary life as a stupid joke.
A Fun Read, as Usual March 10, 2010 Margaret Morgan (Blacksburg, VA) 0 out of 3 found this review helpful
I really don't understand what the people who've been writing the negative reviews are expecting. If you want great literature, read War and Peace. If you want fun, light, hilarious insanity, then you can't do better than this and all the Stephanie Plum novels.
A plot synopsis would be a bit redundant in view of how many previous reviews contained synopses. I will say that I enjoyed having some emphasis on Lula, and definitely agree with those who compared the Lula-Grandma pairing to Lucy and Ethel.
I don't know if I really want the Joe-Ranger question to be resolved, although I am in favor of Stephanie's finally settling on Joe. In one novel Stephanie described Ranger as being "like smoke." I don't see him as a candidate for the long term.
The only thing I disliked about this book is how long I have to wait for the next one. Please, Janet, keep writing - I for one can promise you I'll keep reading!!
Oh, How I miss Stephanie March 8, 2010 Hobbie 4 out of 4 found this review helpful
I have read every one of the Plum books, but please Janet give us a break. Did you write this one while you were asleep, or driving? The material is old and has become boring and repetitive. Some of the characters are super, but the plots are very thin, and the humor has worn off. That hamster should have died by now. I really miss the quality of the early Plum books.
Showing reviews 1-5 of 466
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