Blue-Eyed Devil Audiobook By Robert B. Parker cover art

Blue-Eyed Devil

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Blue-Eyed Devil

By: Robert B. Parker
Narrated by: Titus Welliver
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Buy for $13.50

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Law enforcement in Appaloosa had once been Virgil Cole and me. Now there was a chief of police and twelve policemen. Our third day back in town, the chief invited us to the office for a talk.

The new chief is Amos Callico, a tall, fat man in a derby hat, wearing a star on his vest and a big pearl-handled Colt inside his coat. An ambitious man with his eye on the governorship—and perhaps the presidency—he wants Cole and Hitch on his side. But they can’t be bought, which upsets him mightily.

When Callico begins shaking down local merchants for protection money, those who don’t want to play along seek the help of Cole and Hitch. When Cole is forced to fire on the trigger-happy son of politically connected landowner General Horatio Laird, Callico sees his dream begin to crumble. The guns for hire are thorns in the side of the power-hungry chief, and he’ll use any excuse to take them out. There will be a showdown—but who’ll be left standing?
Action & Adventure Historical Fiction Westerns Fiction Genre Fiction

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Appaloosa Audiobook By Robert B. Parker cover art
Appaloosa By: Robert B. Parker
Lean Storytelling • Unquestionable Ethics • Awesome Narrator • Simple Plot • Moral Themes • Excellent Performance

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Love it good story. Great characters. It would make a good t.v. Series like deadwood.

Next great series

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Lean, succinct story of two cowboys, Everett Hitch and Virgil Cole, with unquestionable ethics and unshakable loyalties to themselves and each other. Beautifully done, well read.

Classic Parker!

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This is not up to the books that came before it. It's well written, and not bad, but Parker seemed to be running out of things to say. Earlier books were about Cole figuring out who he was, and what his relationship with Allie was, and here that seems to be largely settled. What remains is a standard problem for Cole and Hitch: large numbers of men dominating a town, and, in this case, another group attacking a town, and Cole and Hitch need to deal with them, with the help of a few other professsionals. You look for interesting details to spice it up, and there are a few, but it has a fourth-book-in-the-contract feel. The style isn't as taut as in Appaloosa.

I read two or three of the non-Parker followups when they came out, and my impression was that they had no real reason to exist. One good thing about libraries is that you can determine things like that painlessly.
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Titus Welliver is excellent, as always.

The end of the series

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Too short for $10 credit but it’s part of the series. It was good for 4hrs

Way too short for a credit

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What did you love best about Blue-Eyed Devil?

I will read (and on Audible, listen to) anything written by Robert B. Parker. Whether the hero is Spenser or Sunny Randle or Virgil Cole really doesn't matter. And the plot doesn't really matter that much either. What matters is the terrific dialogue. I just love to

What was one of the most memorable moments of Blue-Eyed Devil?

When Laurel leaves with Pony

Which scene was your favorite?

The Indian attack on Appaloosa

If you could rename Blue-Eyed Devil, what would you call it?

Not sure, but

The perfect voice for this story

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