Sandford is a prolific author and I
have not yet scratched the surface of his many volumes, but I can safely say
that I will be reading all of at least two of his series. He reminds me of Hiaasen, and that
is a huge compliment. Like Hiaasen, Sandford creates characters with an
irreverent and innovative brilliance. If you also like characters who engage in
creative cursing and philosophical meanderings, these flawed protagonists will
make you happy.
Sandford's good guys have a strong moral compass that has
nothing to do with piety or religion and everything to do with living an
examined life. The characters and plots are not as wacky and outrageous as
Hiaasen's, but that might be an accurate reflection of the difference between Minnesota and
Florida. That is not to suggest that there is anything bland about the Sanford
stories. On the contrary, the color in both the language and the circumstances is
artful and amazing. Not
since Shakespeare have rogues and miscreants been insulted
with such
enthusiastic poetry.
These characters do not take themselves too seriously, and
that feature is one of several that makes the stories move along in a sort of freewheeling style. Detective novels can be made tedious by too much
swashbuckling. Sandford's story telling gets another boost from the fact that
there is little to no "filler" in the books. Every sentence moves
the plot along briskly and meaningfully - downright cheerfully, to be perfectly honest.
There is definitely an upbeat quality to the cast of characters.
There are Prey novels, Flowers novels, Kidd novels, a series called Singular Menace, and a couple of non-series books. The Prey series is the longest and contains some fairly grisly content. But all of the books are suspenseful and create some tension. Sandford is a good researcher and the tension is often created by his delving into the minds of the truly nefarious. Everyone has heard the phrase, "couldn't put it down." It is a saying that applies to every one of Sandford's books.
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