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Hardball (V.I. Warshawski Novel)

(Book #13 in the V.I. Warshawski Series)

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Format: Hardcover

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Book Overview

Chicago politics--past, present, and future--take center stage in this complex and compelling V.I. Warshawki novel from New York Times bestselling author Sara Peretsky. Tracking down missing persons... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Excellent Mystery -- Once You Get Into It

To think, I nearly put this book on the shelf, unread. The author had a "Thanks" introduction that simply didn't sell me; it seemed the book would be too historical, too political, to suit my current mood. But I read some Vine reviews that were so glowing that I gave it another chance. Thank you, other reviewers, for pushing me to give it a shot. I loved this book. Hardball was gritty, sad, compelling, exciting -- all with V. I. Warshawski at the helm, creating havoc every time she starts detecting. The story introduces Vic's niece, Petra, who arrives in Chicago to work for an aspiring senator on his campaign. Petra's big mouth gets a lot of powerful men up in arms, and it seems likely linked to Vic's latest case. Of course there are explosions, ransacked apartments, escapes in instrument cases and hospital linen carts. Old gangs, bad cops, civil rights marchers, even Vic's beloved cop father all figure into the plot. It had been a long time since I read a V.I. Warshawski book. This was by far my favorite, probably the best. I really loved it. Even the very last chapter -- the very last line -- were great.

Well Worth the Wait!

As a long-time fan of this series, I have been impatiently tapping my foot waiting for the next V.I. Warshawski case to arrive. Here it is at last, and it's terrific. This author and her heroine just keep getting better with age. Sara Paretsky always does a masterful job of working social issues into the story without being preachy, and this missing-person case that reaches back to the civil rights era is no exception. Juggling past and present with nary a fumble, the author both entertains and enlightens with a thought-provoking, gut-wrenching tale as relevant as today's headlines. Readers also learn more about V.I.'s personal past as the investigative trail leads her toward disturbing discoveries about her own family. And the city of Chicago itself becomes one of the book's colorful, vividly drawn characters, proving once again that this author knows her setting inside and out. By skillfully weaving together the various narrative threads, Paretsky raises the emotional stakes and cranks up the suspense, delivering a knockout ending. Wow! It doesn't get any better than this.

A Wild Ride

Upon returning from a life-altering trip to Italy, V. I. (Victoria Iphigenia) Warshawski plunges head first into a case that transcends time as she journeys through mementos of her family's past. But unfortunately for V. I., she gets much more than she bargained for as her work in the present causes her to delve deeper and deeper into the work of her father, a policeman in Chicago years before. What was her father hiding? And why is her cousin, Petra, an intern at the governor's office, so interested in the case? As if she didn't have enough to deal with, V. I. takes on another case at the request of a local nun, a case that leads back to a dangerous prisoner on death row. This puts our heroine up against corrupt policemen from decades past, prison inmates who still run the streets of South Chicago, and a gang known as the "Anacondas" as she tries to loosen the criminal grip on her city. Readers of the last 14 Paretsky mysteries who have come to love her favorite doctor and great friend, Dr. Lotty Herschel, and her tireless elder neighbor, Mr. Contreras, will not be disappointed as they return to support V. I. as best they can. Also present at each turn of the page are familiar Chicago landmarks and events. Particularly interesting are the references to Martin Luther King's visit to Chicago and the racial tensions the event uncovered. In addition, Chicago corruption (both then and now) adds another dimension to the plot as layer upon layer of the city's seedy underbelly is revealed. But it isn't until Homeland Security gets involved with a presumably simple disappearance case 40 years old that the story really begins to heat up. When authors write what they know and what they have lived, they are normally on safe ground, and Sara Paretsky is no exception. Paretsky knows Chicago, its not-so-subtle political intrigue and its sordid history. She has been a Chicagoan since the summer of '66, and that time in her life has had a profound effect on her work: "The intensity of that summer, the pleasure I had in working with the children, the engagement with the city, despite its flaws, made Chicago a part of me, or me part of it, and it has been my home ever since. HARDBALL takes place in the present, but the heart of the story has its roots in that summer." Don't make plans to do anything important when you crack open the cover of HARDBALL. Once you do, you will be unable to put it down until you've finished. With Paretsky at the wheel, you can be sure that you will be in for a wild ride: past meets present, decades-old secrets are unearthed, and all hell breaks loose. Be there to discover if V. I. Warshawski is able to take back the streets of Chicago once and for all. --- Reviewed by Marge Fletcher

This series just keeps getting better and better

Sara Paretsky just keeps getting better and better. Some authors of long-running series run out of steam but each new V.I. Warshawski book I read becomes my new favorite. This one is no exception. If you are new to V.I. Warshawski, this is a really good book and you'll enjoy it. But you won't get all the nuances that you get when you've read enough of the series to "know" the characters. My suggestion is that you start at the beginning of the series (Indemnity Only (V.I. Warshawski Novels)) and read each of the books in order. If you've read any of my other reviews, you'll know I never take my own suggestions to always read a series in order, but I still think it is the best way to go. One of the things I enjoy about this series is that Ms. Paretsky weaves social issues into a captivating mystery. This book is a prime example. In a year when we inaugurated our first black president, she brings us back to a time, sadly not all that long ago, when racial tensions resulted in violent protests and riots. The mechanism to bridge the years is a missing person case. V.I.'s search for a missing man brings her into the past and and the past threatens V.I.'s most cherished memories. Family has always been a big part of V.I.'s life (even though it is mostly through memories) and regular readers know how much she loved her parents. In this book she gets to know some of her extended family members. There is an interesting contrast between the often brusque V.I. who doesn't generally stop to think about whether she's stomping all over someone's feelings and her bubbly young cousin who everyone adores at first meeting. The author weaves the past and the present together into a story I couldn't put down; not only Chicago's past and present but V.I.'s past and present as well. This is a "must read" book for all mystery lovers not just fans of Sara Paretsky.

A joy to read

I rarely award five stars, but in this case it was a slam dunk. In this episode, Vic Warshawski is begged by a pastor to find a man missing for forty years to comfort his loving aunt who is now dying. Vic soon suspects that the January 1967 disappearance is connected to a civil rights march that occurred in the summer of 1966. Meanwhile, on the personal side of life, Petra, a young (just of of college) cousin whom Vic has never met comes to town to work on a political campaign, and wants to get to know Vic. Of course these threads ultimately overlap, and lead us back into the summer of 1966 and the civil rights movement. Scenes from past and present highlight what has and has not changed since then. Ms. Paretsky has created a truly satisfying plot, where nothing is too obvious, the reader's guesses are not always right, and all the puzzle pieces fit beautifully. But for long-time fans, Vic's interaction with the live members of her family and thoughts about those who have died is the real treat. Vic is much less "together" than usual, and her pugnacious independence seems to be growing, as she ages, into a defensive shell hiding deep loneliness. Lacking any enduring pair bond and having few close friends, she spends an unhealthy amount of time mourning her long-dead father and mother. Her memories of her mother, especially, are compelling. Vic seems so real that I feel like sending her advice. Finally -- Ms. Paretsky, should you happen to read these reviews, I thank you for making me feel that I am not the only person in America still mourning the loss of the hope and idealism of the '60s.
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