G.P. Putnam's Sons
(Fiction, Crime Thriller)

Hugger Mugger

by Robert B. Parker

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Spenser heads for horse country, in a thoroughbred addition to the landmark series by the assured master of American crime fiction.

"It's easy to see why Parker's snappy banter and cynical eye have kept fans turning; pages for twenty-five years. Spenser never seems to be in any; real danger, but his wisecracks, combined with Parker's shorthand flair for scathing characterization, nevertheless make for a satisfying read," said Entertainment Weekly of last year's Hush Money. Now Parker presents Spenser with a dangerous and multilayered case that takes him to the heart of the horse-racing world, as the Boston P.I, travels to a Georgia stable to protect the two-year-old colt destined to become the next Secretariat.

When Spenser is approached by Walter Clive, president of Three Fillies Stables, to find out who is threatening his horse Hugger Mugger, he can hardly say no: he's been doing pro bono work for so long his cupboards are just about bare. Disregarding the resentment of the local law enforcement, Spenser takes the case. Though Clive has hired a security firm, he wants someone with Spenser's experience to supervise the operation. And Spenser can't help being intrigued by Clive's daughter Penny-one of the three fillies-who has an insider's knowledge of the horse world, a deceptively charming air, and a great pair of legs herself.

Despite the veneer of civility, there are tensions beneath the surface southern gentility. The rest of the Clive family isn't exactly thrilled with Spenser's presence, the security chief has made it clear he'll take orders from no one, and the local sheriff's deputy seems content to sit back and wait for another attack. But the case takes a deadly turn when the attacker claims a human victim, and Spenser must revise his opinion of the whole Three Fillies organization-and watch his own back as well.

With razor-sharp dialogue, eloquently spare prose, and some of the best supporting characters to grace the printed page, Hugger Mugger is grand entertainment, further proof that Parker is "the finest prose stylist in the genre" (The Denver Post).