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Big Dig The (Cloth)
 
 

Big Dig The (Cloth) [Hardcover]

Linda Barnes
3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (20 customer reviews)

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Hardcover --  
Hardcover, Mar 21 2001 --  
Mass Market Paperback CDN $8.81  
MP3 CD, Audiobook, MP3 Audio, Unabridged CDN $23.95  

Product Details


Product Description

From Amazon

When PI Carlotta Carlyle is hired to go underground in the newest title in Linda Barnes's popular series, it's more than a figure of speech; she's investigating rumored theft and corruption on the big dig of the title, Boston's multibillion dollar tunnel project. She's also involved in another case, that of a missing woman whose friend, wealthy Brahmin Dana Endicott, knows that even if Victoria left her job tending bar or her other job caring for animals at a local dog-grooming company without giving notice, she would never have abandoned her beloved dog, who's been left behind at Endicott's Back Bay brownstone. Then a workman who alerted authorities that things were disappearing from the dig site dies in a fall that might be an industrial accident but on closer investigation, begins to look like murder. It takes the determined Carlyle a few more beats before she links her two cases with the big Patriot's Day celebration planned at Faneuil Hall on the anniversary of the Waco massacre, but by the time she has, she's located the missing woman and a kidnapped teenager, foiled the bad guys, and managed to bed an undercover FBI agent--attagirl, Carlotta! A lively and engaging heroine in a tidy mystery whose fast-paced narrative slows but doesn't stop for the details about Boston's ambitious, overdue, and overbudget urban renewal project. --Jane Adams --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From Publishers Weekly

The taut ninth entry in Barnes's Carlotta Carlyle series concerns malfeasance at Boston's Central Artery/Third Harbor Tunnel Project, "the biggest urban construction project in the history of the modern world," an engineering marvel and a multibillion-dollar opportunity for graft, kickbacks and political favors. Wounded in the thigh from a gunshot during her last case (1999's Flashpoint) and in the heart from a romance with a rising Mafia don, Carlyle poses as a secretary to find what's rotten at a Big Dig contractor, Horgan Construction. A disgruntled hardhat falls to his death-or is he pushed? Someone seems to be stealing dirt from the site. The boss's wife has a horrible case of nerves. Just as Carlyle feels stymied at the Big Dig, she's diverted by a second, more lucrative case-Dana Endicott, a Boston Brahmin, begs her to find her missing tenant, Veronica James, whose fate seems tied to an oddly silent kennel. Carlyle is immensely likable, tough without being hard, flawed in ways more original than the average mean streets sleuth. Barnes makes excellent use of Boston's ethnic and economic fiefdoms: the waterfront with its yuppies guzzling designer beer; South Boston, where despair clings to its citizens like the aluminum siding to their decrepit houses. The many plot threads are abruptly but satisfyingly tied up with writing that's vivid, economical and fun. Carlyle thinks: "This business, this art, of deception, of keeping daily secrets, hiding a side of your personality, intrigued me." It intrigues readers, too.
Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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I used to work with Happy Eddie Conklin when I was a cop. Read the first page
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20 Reviews
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 (6)
4 star:
 (7)
3 star:
 (1)
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Average Customer Review
3.5 out of 5 stars (20 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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2.0 out of 5 stars not a page turner, July 15 2004
By A Customer
This was my first Carlotta Carlyle book, and I thought it was boring. I will not read another one. I love murder/mystery books and this was not a page turner. The ending was very disappointing.
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4.0 out of 5 stars Carlotta as a secretary, Mar 9 2004
By 
David W. Nicholas (Van Nuys, CA USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
There have been half a dozen or more Carlotta Carlyle mysteries over the years. She's sort of a melding of elements of Spenser on the one hand and V.I. Warshawski and Kinsey Millhone on the other. The author has a good take on Boston and the culture there, and has a good character which she involves in interesting mysteries.

In this installment, she's been hired by a larger P.I. firm which is investigating irregularities on an extremely large construction project, the Big Dig of the title. Basically, they're building a freeway system *under* Boston, so that the traffic won't interfere with the city as much. There's supposedly some sort of fraud going on at a particular construction site, and Carlotta goes undercover to investigate, posing as a secretary.

When she gets there she's bored silly by the case, and on impulse takes a second investigation on. In this second investigation, a woman is looking for her tenant, a younger woman who apparently sat for her dog and acted as her companion, and who has driven off with the client's car and not sent word back as to where she is. Carlotta is for a while baffled by this.

When things begin to sort themselves out, the book is interesting and the solution satisfying and intelligent. It does take the story a while to get going though (hence only four stars) and there are perhaps one too many coincidences for me. I did enjoy the story, though, and would recommend it.

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1.0 out of 5 stars The Big Dig is a crushing bore!, Dec 11 2003
By 
Ninth in the Private Investigator Carlotta Carlyle series finds the tall red head detective in the usual binds. Her checkbook is empty, her love live is virtually non-existent, she still pines for the Sam Gianelli (son of a powerful mob boss) and now her leg hurts almost all the time thanks to being shot in the thigh in the last novel. So when Eddie Conklin wants to see her about a job, she quickly agrees to meet with him. After all, not only is he friends with her father from the days when he was a cop, Eddie helped Carlotta when during her days on the job and since then from time to time. Plus, he is offering steady employment and she needs the money.

He wants her to help investigate possible fraud at a variety of construction sites at "The Big Dig" in Downtown Boston. "The Big Dig" is officially named "The Central Artery/Third Harbor Tunnel Project" and is a massive road-building project in the heart of Boston. The project has been beset by cost overruns and construction delays as well as allegations of fraud and organized crime. In response, a hotline of sorts where folks can call in complaints has been setup and one of the complaints has been assigned to Eddie.

He wants Carlotta's help because the allegation is against Horgan Construction. Eddie knows the Horgan family pretty well and believes that the allegation is false. He wants Carlotta to go undercover and investigate in exchange for a steady paycheck and more work after this case is solved. She agrees and before long has some vague suspicions about certain things but no real proof of a problem. With the sudden apparent accidental death of an employee on site, it becomes clear that Eddie hasn't been totally upfront and honest about the situation and may not want the truth after all.

Frustrated, she quickly agrees to take as second case from a potential client that would not have anything to do with Eddie's situation. While she appreciates the paycheck, she wants the freedom to work a case her way and does so involving a missing roommate. She believes she can work that case in her off hours when she isn't working the other one with no one being the wiser. The two cases pull her in opposite directions leaving her spinning her wheels in each and becoming increasing frustrated with the shallow characters that populate the novel around her.

According to the book jacket this novel is "Suspenseful, unpredictable, and vivid, The Big Dig is a startling return to form for one of the masters of the crime genre." Actually, this book is not any of those things in any way, shape or form. While promotional statements on book jackets are bound to be excessive at times, the reality of the book makes the above statement a damnable lie.

This is an extremely slow moving book where Carlotta through sheer dumb luck stumbles her way to solving the case. It always helps if the criminals are too stupid to be believed and in this case, their ignorance suspends the believability of the book. Furthermore, the plot and the resulting storylines are weak, the action is tepid at best, the solitary sex scene is gratuitous and amazingly weak in its conception as well as being an insult to reader intelligence, and the characters are shallow and very predictable in their actions. The end result of this 275-page novel is crushing boredom and at least one very, very disappointed Carlotta Carlyle fan.

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