Minggu, 02 Juni 2013

Safari (A Stanley Hastings Mystery), by Parnell Hall

Safari (A Stanley Hastings Mystery), by Parnell Hall

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Safari (A Stanley Hastings Mystery), by Parnell Hall

Safari (A Stanley Hastings Mystery), by Parnell Hall



Safari (A Stanley Hastings Mystery), by Parnell Hall

Read Online Ebook Safari (A Stanley Hastings Mystery), by Parnell Hall

Stanley Hastings on safari? I don t think so. Neither did Stanley, until Alice s small inheritance coupled with scrimping on a few luxuries like food and rent allowed them to book a group trip to Zambia. Now the New York PI is hiking with lions, canoeing with hippos, and having close encounters with elephants and giraffes.

It s a dangerous safari. The leader is a reckless, gung-ho, great white hunter who delights in leaping from the jeep with a hearty Come on, gang, let s see where this lion is going! And a series of bizarre accidents quickly dwindles the group s numbers. Why was the guide s young spotter foolish enough to walk under a sausage fruit tree . . . just as one of the huge sausage fruits fell? How did the leaves of a poisonous plant wind up in a tourist s salad? Are these really accidents?

A stabbing tips the scale. It s murder, and the only policeman in a hundred miles is a park ranger (whose only murder case was that of an ivory poacher shot dead in plain sight).

It s up to Stanley to crack the case . . . if he can just avoid being eaten by a lion."

Safari (A Stanley Hastings Mystery), by Parnell Hall

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #6442931 in Books
  • Brand: Hall, Parnell
  • Published on: 2015-05-06
  • Format: Large Print
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 8.60" h x 1.20" w x 5.70" l, .0 pounds
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 399 pages
Safari (A Stanley Hastings Mystery), by Parnell Hall

Review The Stanley Hastings mysteries depend on subversively sly wordplay. In the violently verbal world he inhabits, Stanley would be happy just to win an argument. --Marilyn Stasio"Stanley's cases have going for them some of the deftest and trickiest puzzle-plotting in the field today. "Parnell Hall succeeds in making Stanley Hastings one of a kind. "Hall s smooth style, ready sense of humor, and unusual take on murders in an untamed yet confined setting provide an enjoyable outing for armchair travelers. "In a dry comic voice, Stanley narrates this account of his furtive investigation into three murders that the other tourists observe with remarkable sang-froid. --Marilyn Stasio, 'The New York Times Book Review'"

About the Author Parnell Hall, author of the Puzzle Lady and Stanley Hastings mystery novels, has also been an actor, screenwriter, and singer/songwriter. He is a former President of the Private Eye Writers of America and a member of Sisters in Crime. He has been a finalist for an Edgar, 2 Lefty, and 3 Shamus Awards. Parnell lives in New York City.


Safari (A Stanley Hastings Mystery), by Parnell Hall

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Most helpful customer reviews

4 of 4 people found the following review helpful. Murder, She Roared By Author Bill Peschel It's been years since I've seen Stanley Hastings, the P.I. who does the best he can with what he has. I had read a couple of Parnell Hall's books in the 1990s and loved them. "Suspense" and "Scam" were traditional murder mysteries enlivened by the presence of a detective who was clearly fighting above his weight and unsure of anything. The fact that he knew this, yet still doggedly pursued the truth made it easy to root for him. How can you not have hope for a man who says, "There's a lot of stuff I don't understand. I was born not understanding."So when I was offered the 19th Hastings book, "Safari," I thought it was time to get back in touch."Safari" is set in Zambia and Zimbabwe, far from Stanley's native Manhattan. Stanley and his short-suffering acerbic wife, Alice, have spent an inheritance on a low-budget wildlife tour that promised close encounters with lions, leopards, hippos, giraffes and other tourists. Their trip into the bush is interrupted when a guide is found with a dented skull under a tree bearing heavy sausage fruit. It looks like an accident from a combination of sausage fruit and gravity, and the safari moves on. But Stanley suspects murder. He's correct, of course, but not until another body or two is found, and the possibility grows that one of the tourists was responsible.After about 20 years absence, I still find Stanley funny. He still stumbles through a case, still determined to find the truth. He's also older, which gets him into trouble with Alice when he encounters a nubile member of the group. When she tells him, "you're funny," he thinks, "I wanted to die. I didn't want to be funny. Not to a girl like that. To a girl like that, funny was a pejorative to a guy like me. Funny was what you called your old uncle Wally, the one who never married."I don't recall Philip Marlowe having that problem.The other major comic motif is Alice's disdain for her husband's brains. In the early books, she pops up from time to time to add a bit of pepper to the plot. As part of the party, her derision is so constant that you'd wish Stanley would go find a sausage fruit tree.Dorothy L. Sayers described her novel "Busman's Honeymoon" as "a love story with detective interruptions." Change "love story" to "photographing animals eating each other," and that's "Safari." Don't worry about trying to solve the mystery; Stanley wraps it up in the last two chapters. Treat the book like a real safari, and take pleasure in the journey, not the destination.

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful. Great, but needs a better proof-reader/fact-checker By Brooke Chilvers As a member of Africa's safari industry, I could not help but read a book named SAFARI, and it's the perfect book to read on the plane to Africa. Could have used a better proof-reader/fact-checker. It's TEVA shoes, not TIVA. There are absolutely no indigenous deer species in Africa (European deer have been introduced to some reserves and game farms in South Africa), so any reference to deer should clearly be a joke to the reader and not come off like a mistake in knowledge. And: Shame, shame, shame on you, Parnell Hall - especially if you have been on safari: There are absolutely NO "water buffalo" in Africa. There is only the African buffalo, more correctly referred to as Cape buffalo, among safari buffs - Syncerus caffer. Next time you write about Africa, please contact me and I'll be glad to be your proof-reader.

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Fun mystery in Africa that keeps you guessing By D. Roberts It is always nice to see a long running series change its location and a trip to Africa provides an interesting setting for the mystery. Parnell Hall always includes humor in his books and there were many times I laughed out loud. This is a fun, lighthearted read. The suspects are the fellow travelers on the safari and the staff so the book could be described as an outdoor locked room mystery. I could not put it down for the last third as I wanted to know who did it.I got this at the library based on some of the other reviews. Now that I have read the book I am sorry I waited to read it and did not buy it when it first came out. The review that blasted Alice, Stanley's wife, was already out before I read the book so I looked for the reviewer's points as I read. Most of the negative things attributed to Alice were actually things that Stanley mentally supposed she would say, not things that were ever uttered out loud by Alice. It is Alice's encouragement of her spouse that prompts Stanley to solve it in the end. There are really very few negative remarks by Alice in this book.I read the review that talked about misogynistic comments after I read the book. I think the reviewer stated that she did not finish the book. I wish she had read the whole book because the things she alluded to related to character descriptions at the beginning of the book. The two older women end up being the only ones who are able to correctly do the only physical activity that required lessons in the book.I hope that people will read this book and decide for themselves. If you are a fan of this series then you will like this book. Good mystery in a unusual setting. If I ever go on safari, then I will spring for the more deluxe safari based on the description of the cheap safari they went on.

See all 11 customer reviews... Safari (A Stanley Hastings Mystery), by Parnell Hall


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Safari (A Stanley Hastings Mystery), by Parnell Hall

Safari (A Stanley Hastings Mystery), by Parnell Hall
Safari (A Stanley Hastings Mystery), by Parnell Hall

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