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Vancouver. It would seem that the city has a serial killer, a sniper. Jack Willows and his new partner Claire Parker, lead the investigation. But how does the sniper pick his victims, is their connection between them, and what are the motives for their deaths.
An enjoyable well-written crime story,a good start to the series
Originally written in 1987
 
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Vesper1931 | 2 altre recensioni | Jul 29, 2021 |
Detective Jack Willows is on a long weekend up in the mountains north of Vancouver until he finds a body of a young girl.
Back in the city his partner, Claire Parker, finds a body of a prostitute in a van. Is there a connection between the two deaths.
Found it difficult to engage with any of the characters.
A NetGalley book.
 
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Vesper1931 | 1 altra recensione | Jul 29, 2021 |
Greg is a serial bank robber - for the kicks, and the money gives him a living - and master of disguise. Until his latest where he kills a customer and takes their briefcase.
Willow and Parker have very little information to solve the case.
An okay story.
A NetGalley Book
 
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Vesper1931 | 2 altre recensioni | Jul 29, 2021 |
In cold and rainy Vancouver, Canada, an odd assortment of people are being picked off by a sniper who carefully prepares for each kill by dressing his male self in gaudy drag. The Vancouver police are truly stumped. This is Gough's first book and introduces Vancouver homicide detectives Jack Willows and Clare Parker. He has an interesting way with characters and I'm anxious to read the next in the series to see what is 'first book' and what is regular Gough.
 
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susandennis | 2 altre recensioni | Jun 5, 2020 |
Winston Churchill is purported to have called Vancouver "the most beautiful city in the world." And with Douglas Coupland's "city of glass" occupying a setting punctuated by mountains, water, and forests, Vancouver would certainly be a prime candidate to win that category.

Laurence Gough's series of twelve Willows & Parker mysteries strive to portray a grittier underside to the beauty. Detectives on the Vancouver police force, Jack Willows and Claire Parker deal with the seamier side of humanity, with their perception of the city more as simply a grid of streets than a modernistic Eden.

The problem with the mysteries is that they're not gritty enough. Fall Down Easy is a procedural, but it's a PG-rated procedural. At its center is a serial bank robber who exploits unsuspecting young female bank employees to forward his crimes, only to treat them badly in the end, but in the end, though a cad, he really turns out to be a rather mild-mannered fellow. Willows and Parker themselves belong to a detective squad who, while world-weary, don't speak a single four-letter word. (Is this evidence of the legendary Canadian niceness?)

The book sticks closely to being a pretty strict procedural. None of the characters, particularly Willows and Parker themselves, carries much depth as characters. That was fine with me. It was sufficient to watch the case progress progress and for me as reader to try to figure out exactly what was going on. I happen to have read some of the later Willows & Parker books (Fall Down Easy lands about midway in the series), where they become domestic and we see more of their home life, and those episodes did nothing to strengthen their stories. Fall Down Easy kept its focus on the business-at-hand.

Unfortunately, as it comes to its climax, the Gough has chosen to give it a Keystone Kops-like denouement. So much for gritty underside.

I originally took up reading the Willows & Parker books because of my own fondness for Vancouver. I thought it would be fun reading stories where I could revisit a setting I loved. But having read three or four of them them now, I have to ask myself, "Is the series good enough that I would continue reading it if were set, say, in Des Moines?" And I have to conclude that it isn't.
 
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kvrfan | 2 altre recensioni | Aug 19, 2016 |
A terrifying novel set in Vancouver of drug smuggling and the lives of two men, one a dealer and the other in need of money, caught up in the heinous trade.
Detectives Willows and Parker are sent to investigate an abandoned bloodstained car and so begins a dark, sometimes humourous, mostly violent story that held me to the end.
I was given a digital copy of this book by the publisher Endeavour via Netgalley in return for an honest unbiased review.
 
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Welsh_eileen2 | 1 altra recensione | Apr 16, 2016 |
This is the first book by Laurence Gough that I have read although I have heard good things about the Willows and Parker series. I wasn't initially grabbed by this book but it sort of grew on me.

The book opens with Shelley, a good looking small-time thief, trying to decide which bathing suit looks better on him. To say that Shelley is vain about his looks is to indulge in understatement. He's also not a very nice guy. He took a hatchet to the girl next door's Mazda Miata because she kept parking on the street where he wanted to park. And he's not very smart. He breaks into Willows car at the beach parking lot in plain sight of a man with a metal detector. When Shelley gets picked up at the beach by Bo who is involved with some Asian gangsters you almost want him to get roughed up by them. Meanwhile, Parker and Willows get called in on a murder of a real estate agent, Zagros Galee. They quickly find out that Mr. Galee was not a very successful real estate agent but recently he has had lots of money. In fact, they find an envelope filled with $30,000 in his home study. Mr. Galee was a womanizer and recently a beautiful red head has been seen with him. Bo is a beautiful red head. The reader doesn't have to be too clever to figure out that Shelley's new girl is somehow involved with Zagros Galee's murder. The climatic conclusion has Shelley and Bo being cornered by Bo's erstwhile associates just as Willows and Parker are closing in on them.

I would probably read more books by Laurence Gough if they came my way. I like the chemistry between Parker and Willows and Willows' kids add something unique to the mix.½
 
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gypsysmom | Dec 17, 2011 |
these books are funny but there's something wrong? too much going on? dreadful people?
can only read about 25 pages at a time.
 
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mahallett | Oct 27, 2011 |
readable enough but kind of a stupid story.
 
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mahallett | Jul 31, 2011 |
sometimes quite funny. at first i didn't like it but as i got into it it got better but very peculiar.
 
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mahallett | 2 altre recensioni | May 23, 2011 |
A sniper is on the loose in Vancouver. The victims seem to have nothing in common, and include a woman out on a Friday night, a Greek widow on her way back from work, and a gay taxi driver. It looks as if the killer is choosing his victims randomly until one of the officers in charge of the investigation is killed. The case takes on a whole new direction, and detectives Parker and Willows must work together to trace the clues which the killer leaves at the crime scenes. Can they find him before anyone else dies?
In this thriller set in Vancouver, an elusive killer chooses his victims at random. Jack Willows and his new partner, Claire Parker, are assigned the case, and discover through the killer's carefully planted clues that he is playing with them, leading them to the scene of his next shooting.½
 
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smik | 2 altre recensioni | Jun 1, 2007 |
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