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Book Reviews of Shoot Him If He Runs (Stone Barrington, Bk 14) (Audio CD) (Unabridged)

Shoot Him If He Runs (Stone Barrington, Bk 14) (Audio CD) (Unabridged)
Shoot Him If He Runs - Stone Barrington, Bk 14 - Audio CD - Unabridged
Author: Stuart Woods, Tony Roberts (Narrator)
Audio Books swap for two (2) credits.
ISBN-13: 9780143142461
ISBN-10: 0143142461
Publication Date: 9/25/2007
Rating:
  • Currently 3.9/5 Stars.
 55

3.9 stars, based on 55 ratings
Publisher: Penguin Audio
Book Type: Audio CD
Reviews: Amazon | Write a Review

6 Book Reviews submitted by our Members...sorted by voted most helpful

reviewed Shoot Him If He Runs (Stone Barrington, Bk 14) (Audio CD) (Unabridged) on + 44 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
In this book Stone Barrington, Will Lee and Holly Barker all participate as characters.

But it's really an awful book--with cheap situations and unnecessary sex scenes, of course with everyone suitably oversexed and eager at the drop of a hat, complete with nude beaches and tropical alcoholic concoctions and trite stereotypical banana republic jerks running the Carribean island being visited.

The worst part is the ho-hum chase for Teddy Fay, the techy ex-CIA arch-villain who just refuses to be caught, and who keeps somehow threatening the reputation of Will Lee, who is up for re-election. I think it's time to kill him Teddy off and either retire from writing this drivel or slow down on the publication schedule and come up with some original stories.

This author wrote CHIEFS--He is capable of way better than this.
reviewed Shoot Him If He Runs (Stone Barrington, Bk 14) (Audio CD) (Unabridged) on + 286 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
I agree with the first review in this column, Stuart Wood books when he first started were great; now it's just to much sex and not enough story; enough that I don't even bother with his books anymore.
Margie H.
reviewed Shoot Him If He Runs (Stone Barrington, Bk 14) (Audio CD) (Unabridged) on + 43 more book reviews
If the CIA, FBI, NYPD and all the other agencies involved in these series are as trite, incompetent, and totally surprised that a room may be bugged, I can only imagine that this may be a contributing factor to our internationally embarrassing intelligence web. The dialog is contrived, juvenile and so frustrating naive. There a just a few mildy "torrid" sex scenes that add nothing to the story line or plot. How can a supposed successful NY attorney (formerly NYPD Detective) a CIA agent (formerly Police Chief) and all the agencies that were intertwined continually stumble and stutter through a very predictable plotline. The only semi-interesting character was the supposed villan who is so smart he just has to keep assasinating those he feels are "bad people". You go Teddy, no wonder you were able to elude detection as long as these characters are on your trail.
reviewed Shoot Him If He Runs (Stone Barrington, Bk 14) (Audio CD) (Unabridged) on
Another solid Stone Barrington storyline in which he interacts with Holly Barker and his longtime friend Dino in the lovely setting of St. Marks island. Always a bit unrealistic as to his lifestyle, the plot is nonetheless engaging and intriguing. A former government employee thought to be dead many years has resurfaced....or has he? Stone and Holly are posing as a couple on a paradise vacation and need to ascertain if in fact he is dead or alive, with implications leading back to the US President. If you read all the Stone Barrington stories, you will enjoy catching up with characters from previous books.
maggieminnich avatar reviewed Shoot Him If He Runs (Stone Barrington, Bk 14) (Audio CD) (Unabridged) on + 400 more book reviews
A very good and surprising book. I enjoyed some of the twists. The book has good character development; however, it would help the reader if they were familiar with some of the characters from previous "Stone Barrington" books. If not, you can still jump in and enjoy the book.
reviewed Shoot Him If He Runs (Stone Barrington, Bk 14) (Audio CD) (Unabridged) on + 3559 more book reviews
Tony Roberts shows off his comedic and dramatic skills in Woods's newest addition to the Stone Barrington saga. The elegant cop-turned-lawyer's new adventure has a welcome lightheartedness. He, his crime-fighting paramour, Holly, and their friends Dino and Genevieve fly to the Caribbean island of St. Marks on a sub-rosa assignment from the CIA to find a homicidal rogue agent rumored to be living in disguise on the island paradise. Woods and Roberts guide us through what turns out to be mainly a lovely vacation for the quartetwith cocktails, elaborate dinners and brisk swims along sparkling white sandy nude beaches marred by an assassination or two and a few anxious moments at the hands of the island's police chiefs. The result is more diverting than thrilling, with Roberts adding considerably to the overall entertainment value via his sly use of amusing British, French and clipped East Coast American accents. One of the nasty police chiefs, for example, sounds suspiciously like Peter Sellers's irrepressible Inspector Clouseau.