Bill Crider just floored me with the news of Robert B. Parker's death. My thoughts are a bit scattered.
I went from The Hardy Boys to Spenser and since 1984 have been a loyal fan. Each February or March I would look for the newest tale of Boston's #1 private investigator and first class cook. When I went to meet with a college advisor he asked me what I wanted to be and I said a detective. I was inspired to take up writing late in life because I knew Parker had. Spenser’s secure, time tested relationship with Susan inspired me to find my own charmer. My interest in Spenser began to wane, slightly, a few years ago but was renewed with Parker’s new creation, Jesse Stone. Plus his western novels featuring Virgil Cole and Everett Hitch proved his writing chops were still in full force.
I’m scanning the news and according to early reports, Mr. Parker died peacefully at his desk. I certainly hope so. My thoughts and prayers go out to his family. He will be missed. RIP.
I’m going to have a beer now. I know Spenser would.
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Sarah Weinman blog: Robert B. Parker is Dead | Another Spenser novel is due in November | WSJ | The Washington Post | ABC News | USA Today | The Rap Sheet: On the Passing of Parker | CS Monitor | The Boston Herald
Sad news.
ReplyDeleteI'll raise a glass to Parker also.
ReplyDeleteStill reeling from this one.
ReplyDeleteMe too - he was one of those people you expected and wanted to live forever.
ReplyDeleteWow. It's hard to imagine life without a new Spenser and Stone story each year.
ReplyDeleteRichard, I'm seeing where there are a few books still coming out but my thoughts exactly. I've been following Spenser, Hawk, and Susan for twenty-six years and it's hard to accept it's finis.
ReplyDeleteWow, this is the first I'd heard. So sorry to hear that.
ReplyDeleteMy first great mystery writer love.
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ReplyDeleteI, too, was a fan of Parker at a young age, and he served as a gateway for some of my greatest literary loves. He will be missed.
ReplyDeleteChris, You touched on something I forgot to mention. Through Parker, I discovered Raymond Chandler, Dashiell Hammett, and Ross MacDonald.
ReplyDeleteDefinitely a sad and shocking day for Parker fans. I have only read Resolution but look forward to enjoying Mr. Parker's other works.
ReplyDeleteJay
Spens-AH!
ReplyDeleteSad indeed...
Aloha, Friend!
Comfort Spiral
Cloudia, that line will always bring back Urich's old TV show and Avery Brooks. He had that line and part down cold.
ReplyDeleteHow sad to die, but how perfect for a writer to die at his desk. My children’s piano teacher died playing Chopin. There can be beauty in death. I like the idea of celebrating a life more than mourning a death. Cheers!
ReplyDeleteIt's always a shock when a writer you've known for years quits this mortal coil. I'm thinking of Robert Holdstock and Michael Crichton who recently spring to mind. Wiki is quick off the mark, with Robert Parker's death on 18 Jan annotated already. Yes, sympathies extended to his two sons (it seems his wife Joan died this year too...)
ReplyDeleteNik/Ross Morton
Sarah, So true. From reports I'm reading, he was quite the humanitarian and his body of work he left behind will endure. That is a cause to celebrate.
ReplyDeleteNik, I just updated my post. I was unaware the real life Susan had passed away. She was quite the talent herself.
May we all die peacefully at our desks! (And at an age that is at least 40x2.)
ReplyDeleteI am charmed by the thought that Spenser's relationship with Susan was a model for you.
I just read The Boston Herald article. It sounds like Parker really deserves all of the loving tributes.
ReplyDeleteBee,
ReplyDeleteYes, it sounds like Boston has lost a generous friend.
It'll be weird when his book comes out next month. Then again, maybe it won't feel weird. Maybe it'll feel like we got one extra book?
ReplyDeleteI found this great quotation by him (boston.com):"The art of writing a mystery is just the art of writing fiction," he told the Globe in 2007. "You create interesting characters and put them into interesting circumstances and figure out how to get them out of them. No one is usually surprised at the outcome of my books."
David, I just read a really wonderful tribute to Spenser/Parker on a blog called Flux Capacitator. You would enjoy it.
ReplyDeletehttp://poemsandnovels.blogspot.com/2010/01/tribute-goodbye-robert-b-parker-thank.html
That was a lovely tribute. I went ahead and left a comment.
ReplyDeleteThanks Bee.