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Seven Up Cover Image Book Book

Seven Up

Evanovich, Janet (Author).

Record details

  • ISBN: 0-312-26584-0
  • Physical Description: print
    Book
    309
  • Publisher: St. Martin's Press

Available copies

  • 1 of 1 copy available at Sitka.

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  • 0 current holds with 0 total copies.
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Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Holdable? Status Due Date
Telkwa Reading Centre FIC EVA (Text) 32872100057979 Adult Fiction Volume hold Available -

  • Booklist Reviews : Booklist Monthly Selections - #1 May 2001
    /*Starred Review*/ The secret to Stephanie Plum's success is revealed on the very first page: her childhood desire to be an intergalactic princess, wear sexy footgear, and carry a cool weapon. She's done it--not the princess part, but she works for her cousin Vinnie as a bail bondswoman, making enough to pay the rent, catch up to the car payments, and afford those sexy shoes and cool guns. The Burg in Trenton, New Jersey, is full of the characters and low-lifes with whom Stephanie grew up (see "Story behind the Story" on the opposite page); this time Stephanie is trying to bring in one of those neighborhood characters, Eddie DeChooch, for his court date. Choochy is old, nearly blind, and close to incontinent, but he manages to evade Stephanie and his various other pursuers until the very end. Subplots abound: Stephanie's perfect sister, Valerie, comes home with her perfect marriage in tatters; Dougie and Mooner, sweet, befuddled fences, get into horrific trouble; Grandma Mazur discovers the, er . . . good vibrations of a Harley. And our heroine's erotic tango with hunkbar Morelli is complicated not only by the order of a wedding dress but also by the scary and irresistible Ranger, her mentor in bounty hunting, who makes her a bargain she can't refuse. Almost every chapter has a laugh-out-loud moment, but Stephanie has some time to think, too: she knows how complicated the feelings are between her and Morelli, and she knows that Ranger is complicated, too. Even Stephanie's mother gets a real moment. Funny, sexy, scary--how can we wait till next year? ((Reviewed May 1, 2001)) Copyright 2001 Booklist Reviews
  • BookPage Reviews : BookPage Reviews 2001 July
    Mysterious summer reading

    Just in time for summer and that all-important decision on vacation reading come new offerings from five well-established crime novelists. Whether you prefer "lighthearted and witty" or "gruesome and gritty," you'll find something here to help wile away those lazy hazy crazy days.

    Janet Evanovich is the crown princess of detective fiction, rapidly gaining on the reigning queen bee, Sue Grafton. Seven Up (audio), the latest in the popular series featuring bounty hunter Stephanie Plum, finds the affable sleuth in a battle of wits (and other more lethal weapons) with a wily geriatric perp. Plum's two suitors, Ranger and Marino, come to her aid, and once again she finds herself on the horns of a dilemma regarding her convoluted love life. Avid readers have followed Plum's romantic interludes with glee and anticipation; pre-publication review copies of the previous book, Hot Six, commanded several hundred dollars on the internet auction site, eBay, from eager readers who couldn't wait to get the latest dish on Plum's affairs of the heart (and more southern regions). As is true of the six Plum mysteries that preceded it, Seven Up is brassy, comical and light-hearted; the characters are composites of folks who are family and friends of the author, and they are each drawn lovingly and humorously.

    Sue Henry has won wide acclaim, not to mention a brace of awards, for her Alaska novels featuring dogsled driver Jessie Arnold. Dead North (audio) finds Arnold stalled in the process of rebuilding her burned-out cabin in the Alaska backwoods. As a favor to her contractor, she agrees to pay a visit to the "lower 48" to pick up his new motor home and drive it back up the desolate Alaska Highway. Accompanying Arnold is her good friend and confidant, Tank, a furry and companionable sled dog. In the remote reaches of northwestern Canada, Arnold and Tank happen upon two fellow pilgrims: a personable gray-haired widow in an upscale motor home, and a redheaded teenage hitchhiker, reserved yet somehow appealing. In the space of a few days, one will become a valued friend, the other a magnet for murder. More and more these days, mystery fiction is centered on characters who fall outside the private eye/police detective/investigative reporter mold; that said, Sue Henry's dogsled musher heroine is about as far afield as anyone has dared venture to date. Still, when a mystery is as engaging and cleverly crafted as Dead North, the reader is quickly drawn in, despite (or perhaps because of) the central character's unusual occupation.

    Echo Burning (audio), number five in Lee Child's gritty Jack Reacher series, finds the ex-MP (as in Military Policeman, as opposed to, say, Member of Parliament) hitching in the stifling west Texas heat. A barroom brawl the night before has resulted in some official interest in Reacher's whereabouts, and he is eager to put some distance between himself and the local authorities. Enter Carmen Greer, a comely and classy Hispanic beauty in a Cadillac. Carmen, it turns out, has married into the wrong family. Her husband has physically abused her for years, and the extended family has turned away in disbelief or disgust. For the past several months, she has had a reprieve, as her husband has been in jail for tax fraud, but he is due to be released in a few days, and Carmen is at her wits' end. She needs a way out, even if it means murder. Reacher accompanies her to the family spread, where he settles in as a paid ranch hand, soon promoted to persona non grata. When Carmen's husband turns up dead, Reacher and Carmen share the limelight as prime suspects, and the plot, as they say, thickens. Jack Reacher is in many ways the spiritual descendant of the unnamed Clint Eastwood character in Sergio Leone's classic spaghetti westerns: he has no car, no suitcase, no friends; just the clothes on his back, some slick moves and a "don't tread on me" 'tude. Fans of Andrew Vachss and Louis L'Amour will find common ground in the rough and tumble Reacher novels.

    Marcia Muller's Sharon McCone series has been well received by readers and critics alike for eons, or so it seems. The popular San Francisco investigator is on brief hiatus, however, as author Muller strikes off in a new direction, a tale of small town murder on the California coast, Point Deception (audio). A series of accidents recalls a grisly multiple homicide from a dozen years before. The local law enforcement officer (female) teams up with a true crime writer from New York (male) to resolve some issues with the current crop of incidents, and to determine whether there might be some connection to the unsolved murders. Muller's tone is a bit tougher and more serious than some of her contemporaries, Janet Evanovich and Sue Grafton, for instance; there is little of the snappy repartee that characterizes many of the current crop of mystery novelists. That said, she has few peers when it comes to crafting a believable and compelling crime novel.

    Writ of Execution (audio) is the seventh legal thriller by Perri O'Shaughnessy, the pen name for two sisters, Pamela and Mary O'Shaughnessy. Their backgrounds are well-suited for turning out credible mysteries: Pamela was a trial lawyer for 16 years, and Mary was an editor and writer for multimedia projects.

    As Writ of Execution begins, Jessie Potter takes a seat at a Lake Tahoe slot machine, feeds in a quarter and pulls the handle. The tumblers spin, then settle: bank, bank, bank, perfectly aligned across the pay line. Bells ring, sirens wail, cameras flash and a chant wells up in the casino: "Jackpot, jackpot, jackpot." An overhead monitor displays the winning amount: $7,767,339.64. What would be a dream come true for most folks has nightmarish aspects for Jessie, though. For months she has been hiding from her wealthy and powerful father-in-law, a man who holds her responsible for the death of his son, and her newfound fame and fortune threaten to blow her cover big time. Still, it is seven million bucks, enough to buy a comfortable hiding place just about anywhere in the world. Jessie hires attorney Nina Reilly to protect her interests, and together they hatch a scheme to collect the money while keeping Jessie's identity a secret. It almost works. . . . The sisters O'Shaughnessy have crafted yet another crackling courtroom drama featuring a strong yet believably human female lead. Move over, John Grisham.

    Bruce Tierney, a Nashville-based writer, is a lifelong mystery reader who was weaned on the Hardy Boys. Copyright 2001 BookPage Reviews

  • Kirkus Reviews : Kirkus Reviews 2001 April #2
    When her cousin Vinny, of Vincent Plum Bail Bonds, tells Stephanie Plum that her next unwilling subject is DeChooch, who's skipped to the tune of $50,000, Steph is less than thrilled. Fuhgedaboudit, says New Jersey's least productive, most seductive bounty hunter: "He's old, and he kills people, and he's dating my grandmother." But no experienced Plum-watcher will take that as definitive. Steph (Hot Six, 2000, etc.), often means yes when she says no—particularly if the question involves money or sex. In this case, the money amounts to five large if she can bag DeChooch. As for sex, enter hunk Trenton detective Joe Morelli and hunk bounty hunter Ranger Manoso, both eager to resume the never-ending battle for Steph's bodacious body, of which both have made notable conquests. But now there's a complicating factor. Steph appears to have engaged herself to marry Morelli, though Ranger can be forgiven if he perceives a certain ambiguity in that complex relationship. At any rate, DeChooch poves exactly the handful Steph feared he might. True, he's got cataracts, and it's been a while since he actually blew anyone away, but the old lion is nobody's pussycat. Besides, he has lots of friends and enemies, none of them out to make Steph's life easier.Though Steph and company try hard, there's an unsettling sense of the overfamiliar this time—the sense of a long-running series hitting the wall. It'll do for the army of true-blue fans, but it's not the one to use as a recruiting tool.Author tour Copyright Kirkus 2001 Kirkus/BPI Communications.All rights reserved
  • Library Journal Reviews : LJ Reviews 2001 February #2
    Bounty hunter Stephanie Plum and sidekick Lula get more than they bargained for when they go after a little old man who smuggled cigarettes. In the meantime, Stephanie's love life goes in two wildly different directions. Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.
  • Library Journal Reviews : LJ Reviews 2001 June #1
    Marked by wise-cracking humor, eccentric characters, and a gritty urban New Jersey setting that thanks to The Sopranos is now quite hip, Evanovich's "Stephanie Plum" series attracts an ever-increasing number of fans with each book. However, readers will be disappointed in this stale outing, especially after the hilarious Hot Six (LJ 5/1/00). Once again, the curvaceous bounty hunter is on the trail of an elusive bail jumper, this time cigarette smuggler Eddie DeChooch, who despite his cataracts and advanced age continually gives Stephanie the slip. Once again, she is trailed by two wise guys, also looking for Eddie. And once again, Stephanie must choose between sexy vice-cop Joe Morelli, to whom she gets accidentally engaged, and sexy fellow bounty hunter Ranger. What had been a fresh and winning formula in the earlier books has disintegrated into unamusing slapstick; there's barely a trace of mystery or plot, and the characters have become cartoons. Despite these serious flaws, there will still be patron demand. [Previewed in Prepub Alert, LJ 2/15/01.] Wilda Williams, "Library Journal" Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.
  • Publishers Weekly Reviews : PW Reviews 2001 May #1
    It's always a treat to go out on a case with Stephanie Plum, the sassy, adventurous, but not always successful Trenton, N.J., bounty hunter. In her seventh outing (after 2000's Hot Six), Stephanie's employer, her bailbondsman cousin, Vinnie, gives her an easy job: pick up vicious senior citizen Eddie DeChooch, who is constantly sighted racing around Trenton in a borrowed white Cadillac, but whom no one can grab. While in Virginia picking up the cigarettes he's charged with smuggling into New Jersey, he stole the heart from the recently dead body of his enemy, Louis DeStephano. The heart's whereabouts define the darkly hilarious trajectory of the plot. The usual characters inhabit the novel: Steph's former high school buddies, the zonked-out Dougie and Mooner; and Evanovich's best creation, feisty Grandma Mazur. Stephanie's much-resented sister Valerie returns from California with her two daughters, her "perfect" marriage ended, and moves in with her parents, to their dismay. Steph and her lover Joe Morelli almost set a wedding date, but again she avoids commitment, still attracted to fellow bounty hunter Ranger. At times the plot meanders: Stephanie and pal Lula spend too much time running from house to house in the inbred Burg neighborhood, while two semi-retired crooks looking for DeChooch keep breaking into her apartment for little reason. All in all this is another zesty Evanovich read, but one that doesn't quite hit the high marks of her last two. (June 19) Forecast: Evanovich has developed a loyal following among mystery fans and her ascendancy to the bestseller lists has introduced her to a large new readership. Despite not being up to her usual standard, this will hit the lists, too, and hard. Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.

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