THEY'RE BAAAAACK. Their first caper, The Spellman Files, was a New York Times bestseller and earned comparisons to the books of Carl Hiaasen and Janet Evanovich. Now the Spellmans, a highly functioning yet supremely dysfunctional family of private investigators, return in a sidesplittingly funny...
Isabel Spellman, the new Stephanie Plum, is a 28-year-old single woman from a dysfunctional family. That in and of itself is not unusual, but the particular form her family’s dysfunction takes is quite different – the family business is a private detective firm and snooping and blackmailing each...
One of my favorite sayings--and that I rarely get to use--is that someone is "too clever by half." It's so snarky and such a backhanded little insult that I love it! But it's hard to use in everyday conversation. So I was sort of delighted to be able to apply that phrase to this shitty book. (I w...
Possible spoilers. Je n'aurais jamais cru mettre 2 étoiles à un Spellman, et pourtant.J'ai trouvé ce tome beaucoup moins drôle que les précédents, limite déprimants à certains moments, et je n'ai pas du tout adhéré à l'évolution de certains personnages.J'ai trouvé l'évolution de David ridicule, H...
I was disappointed in this book. while we have seen Izzy make some growth in the previous books.It seems like she sweep all that away and went back to her childish behavior once again. it was disappointed to see relationship wise she has not really grown at all. however when it comes to the famil...
Izzy Spellman is looking to get back into the detective game when a man hires her to see what his wife is up to. Meanwhile, what is with her brother David? Who is blackmailing Izzy? Why is her car never where she left it? And did Rae really cheat on the PSATs? All these questions and more wi...