photo © Marion Ettinger

T. Jefferson Parker

Blue sub-photo line.GIF (62 bytes)






 

PRAISE FOR
The Renegades

Booklist *Starred Review*
Parker’s superb new thriller continues the tale of Charlie Hood, the Los Angeles sheriff’s deputy who fell hard for beautiful gangster Allison Murrieta in L.A. Outlaws (2008). Deputy Hood now patrols the Antelope Valley, a desert region north of Los Angeles where still nights and stark beauty provide a refuge from his past (though he still hasn’t come to terms with Murrieta’s death). But Hood’s new beat has a breed of heinous criminals all its own. When his partner, Terry Laws, known by fellow officers as Mr. Wonderful, is gunned down in the passenger seat of their patrol car, Hood once again finds himself among the dark-hearted and the damned. It turns out that Laws wasn’t such a model cop after all. He and a former partner were involved in a lucrative operation running drugs south of the border. Then Laws found a conscience -- a little too late.

Two-time Edgar winner Parker vividly evokes the spirit of the Wild West, where bad guys prosper and good guys seek vengeance -- at a price. He delivers steady suspense and a cast of damaged characters led by Hood, whose days crackle with moral conundrums and bone-deep regret. Approaching the novel’s climax, Parker writes: “a wiggle of fear came up Hood’s back and crawled across his scalp.” Readers will likely find themselves rattled -- and riveted -- too.
--Allison Block

Blue sub-photo line.GIF (62 bytes)

PRAISE FOR
Summer of Fear

Publishers Weekly
Timeworn thriller conventions are skillfully recycled in this suspenseful tale of serial murder and misdirection in California's Orange County. When reporter/crime writer Russell Monroe finds his former lover brutally slain in an apparently ritual style, he suspects a connection to other recent murders in the county. Somehow, the case never appears on the police blotter --although Russell saw his former colleague, homicide chief Marty Parish, leaving the scene of the crime -- and soon all evidence of the death disappears. Meanwhile, a string of killings continues in the same gruesome style, and Russell becomes the contact of the deranged man responsible. As the writer gets dangerously entangled in this deadly intrigue, his wife Isabella fights a terminal brain tumor. While this material may sound hopelessly hackneyed, Parker (Laguna Heat ; Pacific Beat) delivers it in a surehanded narrative notable for taut pacing and plot twists that keep the reader wondering whom to trust. Russell's desperate first-person narrative voice is convincing and often gripping.
-- Copyright 1993 Reed Business Information, Inc.


Library Journal
Any fan of Parker's previous work will queue up to read about a serial killer in Orange County who wipes out entire families. Russ Monroe, ex-cop turned writer, wants to know why the police are so secretive and why they have obliterated all evidence of his ex-lover's murder.
-- Copyright 1993 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Kirkus Reviews
In three novels, Parker (Pacific Beat; Little Saigon; Laguna Heat) has proven himself a master of the California thriller. So he can be forgiven for this ill-crafted amalgam of serial-killer chiller and tragic love story. Parker's narrator here is Russ Monroe, true-crime author and reporter for the Laguna Journal. As the story begins, two calamities plague Monroe: the slow death of his wife, Isabella, from a brain tumor; and the murder of his ex-lover, supermodel Amber Mae Wilson, whose savaged body Monroe finds in her home. Amber's death bears the hallmarks of the serial killer known as the Midnight Eye -- except that, just before Monroe entered Amber's home, he spied Amber's ex-husband, Laguna homicide cop Martin Parish, wiping fingerprints off the outside gate. When the crime isn't reported, Monroe returns to the killing ground and finds the body missing but Parish lurking about. Monroe suspects Parish of the crime, while Parish claims innocence and accuses, then tries to frame, Monroe: Both are in Amber's will. But soon Amber herself surfaces -- the victim was in fact her look-alike sister, Alice -- even as Monroe and Amber's daughter turns up (did she help do away with Alice?), and as the Midnight Eye takes to calling Monroe at home, ranting about his crimes. Meanwhile, Isabella deteriorates -- and endures an operation -- as Monroe grieves for her and for his inability to save her, despite his pleasure in helping to i.d. the Midnight Eye, who escapes to N.Y.C. And then yet another possible Alice-killer surfaces -- and he owns a copy of Bret Easton Ellis's American Psycho.... A soggy, slow-moving fog -- out of which, however, the subplot of the writer and his doomed wife glows with heart-stirring radiance.

Blue sub-photo line.GIF (62 bytes)

PRAISE FOR
Laguna Heat

Laguna Heat will linger in the memory long after all the puzzle's pieces are finally in place.
-- The Washington Post

Parker is a potent and irresistible writer."
-- Los Angeles Times

Parker writes prose so hard-boiled he might have inherited Raymond Chandler's saucepan."
-- USA Today

Slick and elegant..."
- - Los Angeles Times

Blue sub-photo line.GIF (62 bytes)

PRAISE FOR
Pacific Beat

T. Jefferson Parker is a powerhouse writer.
-- The New York Times Book Review

Parker's absorbing story and rich characters will surprise you as their many dimensions unfold.
-- Seattle Times

The kind of book you think about long after you have finished it...intelligent, sensitive, poignantly real...Parker emerges as one of our best novelists.
-- Atlanta Journal & Constitution

A hothouse of full-bloomed characters and ripe emotions.
-- Kirkus Reviews

T. Jefferson Parker is not the first to explore the peculiar psyche of Orange County -- he's simply the best.
-- San Diego Union

Parker is a gifted writer...superb...a smart and compelling read.
-- L.A. Style

T. Jefferson Parker makes the turf of Raymond Chandler and Ross MacDonald his own with a novel steaming with atmosphere and taut with suspense.
-- Literary Guild

An outstanding, memorable, and magnetic work!
-- Library Journal

Parker is a robust storyteller who delights in bewildering reversals. He passionately describes the disappearing coastal culture while composing a tantalizing story of small-town politics."-
-- St. Louis Post-Dispatch

Blue sub-photo line.GIF (62 bytes)

PRAISE FOR
Little Saigon

Thickly plotted...a tense thriller that builds to an astonishing payoff!
-- Playboy

Exotic...surprises turn up every five minutes.
-- New York Daily News

Thoroughly satisfying...tension that builds wave on wave to a crashing climax!
-- Cincinnati Post

Memorable...further proof that [Parker's] no flash in the pan, but a glowing fixture in the thriller firmament.
-- Kirkus Reviews

Pulse-quickening and thought-provoking...with his second novel, T. Jefferson Parker confirms the talent demonstrated in his first.
-- San Diego Union

His plotting and pacing are now essentially faultless.
-- Miami Herald

A lesson in the seamless splicing of suspense and terror.
-- Booklist

Blue sub-photo line.GIF (62 bytes)

PRAISE FOR
L.A. Outlaws

L.A. Outlaws is hard, fast, and etched with characters so sharp they'll leave you bleeding. This is the best T. Jefferson Parker novel yet.
-- Robert Crais

Parker could well be the best crime writer working out of Southern California.
-- Chicago Tribune

Parker ranks as one of the top contemporary suspense writers.
-- Publishers Weekly

If there’s a better mystery writer around…well, there isn’t.
-- San Diego Union Tribune

 

Blue line.GIF (62 bytes)

PRAISE FOR
The Fallen
A Novel

With his trademark psychological acuity and empathy, Parker creates a world of fully realized characters coping with obsession and loss. The winner of two Edgars for best novel, Parker could well earn a third with this compelling effort.
-- Publishers Weekly

 

Blue line.GIF (62 bytes)

PRAISE FOR
California Girl

Winner of the MWA Edgar Award for Best Novel of 2004. Shortlisted for the Anthony, Hammett and Macavity Awards for Best Novel.

If you haven't read any of T. Jefferson Parker's books, you are missing out on something special. This one is highly recommended!
-- Nancy Eaton for BestsellersWorld.com

Absorbing, atmospheric, violent, and evocative, California Girl is T. Jefferson Parker's best work yet.
-- Claire E. White for WritersWrite.com


 

Blue line.GIF (62 bytes)

PRAISE FOR
Silent Joe

Winner of the MWA Edgar Award for Best Novel and the Los Angeles Times Book Prize for Best Mystery/Thriller. The LA Times also named it one of the Best Books of 2001. It was shortlisted for the Hammett Award and the Macavity Award.

He crafts an intricately layered story... perhaps Parker's most ambitious work to date.
-- Publishers Weekly (starred review)

...this is another highly professional score from a savvy veteran.
-- Kirkus Reviews

...a dark, sexy gem. A complex mix of seemingly unconnected plot lines, vivid characterization, and real mystery merge to form a truly satisfying thriller.
-- Library Journal

 

Copyright © 1998-2010 Literati.net