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Hardcover The Price of Love and Other Stories Book

ISBN: 0061809489

ISBN13: 9780061809484

The Price of Love and Other Stories

(Part of the Inspector Banks Series)

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Format: Hardcover

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Book Overview

The award-winning author of the New York Times bestselling Inspector Alan Banks novels, Peter Robinson dazzles with his first collection of short fiction, The Price of Love and Other Stories. Marked... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

A pearl worthy of the price...

Peter Robinson is one of those authors I buy sight unseen. I've been a fan of his Inspector Banks series for years and whenever a new Robinson is published, I snatch it up. Imagine my surprise, then, when this turned out to be a book of short stories. What a delight! Short-story writing is a bit of an arcane craft but in the right hands, it is a genuine pleasure. There are some stories that were never meant to be whole books but they can be collected like loose jewels in a box. This book is such, with the added thread of a common theme: the many and varied ways in which love exacts a price - on the characters and on the reader. And we aren't deprived of Banks. He's here in perfect miniature and the stories where he is featured add to our knowledge of him and serve to explain some of the shadows we sense in his past. I think that moreso with short story collections than full-length novels, the reader brings more of him/herself to the experience. We get to flesh out more of the story for ourselves. I enjoyed all of these individually and collectively, but the one that has stuck with me the longest is "Cornelius Jubb". This is short-story writing done to perfection.

I highly recommend

I'm not normally a fan of short stories, but I'm a huge Peter Robinson fan so I bought The Price of Love. I loved it. Some of the stories have already been described by other reviewers so I'll just say I liked every one and I think you will too. I liked the Inspector Alan Banks stories as they gave new insight into his past. I highly recommend this book to anyone who enjoys a good story.

12 Self-Contained Examples of Writing Done Right

Peter Robinson is best known for his book-length work concerning the exploits of Detective Inspector Alan Banks of the London Major Crimes Unit, which makes THE PRICE OF LOVE AND OTHER STORIES a much-anticipated and most welcome treasure. Banks is somewhat low-key, possessed of an encyclopedic knowledge of popular music and a tendency to be unlucky in love. He is also, to the criminal mind, a quite lethal adversary. Robinson's sharp characterizations of not only Banks but also of his supporting cast combine with intriguing plots to make this series a revered one among mystery aficionados. The 12 shorter works that comprise THE PRICE OF LOVE do not all concern Banks, but exhibit the same high quality of craft as do their better known (and longer) cousins. THE PRICE OF LOVE is wisely and delightfully bookended by two Inspector Banks novellas. "Going Back" opens the volume; it had never been published in the United States before, though portions of it appear in CLOSE TO HOME. The story deals with Banks's somewhat reluctant return home for a family reunion occasioned by his parents' golden wedding anniversary. Robinson does not begin with pyrotechnics; instead, he pulls off the neat trick of perfectly capturing the tediousness of coming back to a small town and the awkwardness of an adult child around aged parents with whom contact is infrequent and irregular. Even so, Robinson somehow manages to quietly ratchet up the suspense in increments. "Like a Virgin," the novella that closes the collection, was written especially for THE PRICE OF LOVE. Banks revisits the horrific event that resulted in his transplant from London to Eastvale. While suspenseful, it is the cerebral aspects of "Like a Virgin" that ultimately make the story what it is. The manner in which Robinson slices in and out of life and the emotions, constructive and otherwise, define our humanity. As with so much of his work, he mines deep territory without burying the reader in the gravitas of the subject matter. It is a perfect way to end the book. And what about the material that lays between the beginning and end? These stories --- even the eight pieces that don't feature Banks --- are also worth reading. One does not think of Robinson as a writer of dark fantasy, yet "The Magic of Your Touch" is just that --- and perfect to boot. Fans of the genre will see what's coming within the first page or two, yet the joy of the journey is such that you will not mind. "Birthday Dance," on the other hand, tiptoes slowly to a bad place that is revealed about two-thirds of the way through; even after its surprising revelation, Robinson saves the best for last, a shocking scene that is only a sentence or two in length yet stays coiled in the mind. With so many good stories --- not a bad one in the pack --- it's hard to choose a winner. Actually, on second thought, it's not. "Blue Christmas," a Banks story written for a limited edition work, is worth the price of admission all by itself. While i

superb anthology

This twelve story collection proves Peter Robinson has a wider range than just the Banks police procedural novels though the great Detective Inspector stars in some of the entries. Banks stars in two bookend novellas, "Going Back" which affirms you can go home even when it turns nasty and "Like a Virgin" in which he left London for Eastvale following a horrific crime he investigated. Both are terrific as are banks' short entries. However what make the anthology even more engaging is the other stories that run the gamut of time and place. During WWII in Yorkshire, Black American GI "Cornelius Jubb" is accused of rape more so because of the color of his skin; also in WW II, but on the continent a soldier relates his fears as "Shadows on the Water" has him wondering whether he has the red badge of courage. In "The Cherub Affair" a Noir downtrodden tough guy private eye hooks up with a femme fatale in need. With a suspense that crosses into horror and two more Banks shorts, THE PRICE OF LOVE AND OTHER STORIES is a winner especially for fans of the Yorkshire DCI as "Like a Virgin" is new and "Going Back" never published in America. Harriet Klausner

The Exploration of a Dying Art

Peter Robinson is back with a collection of short fiction, a rare find in the world of publishing. Not many authors are given the opportunity to compile a slew of short stories and novellas. It seems like a dying art, until now. In "The Price of Love", Robinson returns with riveting and insightful stories to shape the human heart. In the title story, "The Price of Love," the author structures his characters around the dark side of human nature. Tommy, the protagonist, stumbles across a law-enforcement badge while playing on the beach during one summer. The treasure, as he calls it, is a sign and a remembrance of his late father. With sharp, clever writing, Robinson does not disappoint in this new outing. His characters are well-drawn and interesting, as is the case with Tommy. Robinson marks his signature web of storytelling with two novella-length stories featuring the infamous Yorkshire Inspector Alan Banks: "Going Home" and "Like a Virgin." The Inspector, thanks to a well crafted hand, is at his best in this collection. The Inspector's return home for a family reunion turns disastrous in more ways than one. In "Like a Virgin," Robinson takes his main character back to a time of deja vu, where the road leads to a world of crime. The gifted talent of Robinson continues in other Alan Banks short fiction as well: "The Eastval Ladies' Poker Circle," and "Blue Christmas." The non-Alan Banks stories compiled between these pages also shine in their lumnious prose: "Cornelius Jubb" and "The Magic of Your Touch" deal with the issue of race. "The Cherub Affair", starring Inspector Lang seems like a character Robinson could develop in a new series. "Shadows on the Water" is a creepy outing and one of the highlights in the book. Other non-Banks stories include: "The Ferryman's Beautiful Daughter," "Walking the Dog," and "Birthday Dance." "The Price of Love and Other Stories" is filled with life's explorations of love, greed, and the unimaginable. Robinson weaves a hand of humility and sacrifce between the pages, and the reader is left with a compelling finale each and every time. Rich with smart and nervy prose, "The Price of Love" is a remarkable endeavor and one that Robinson should be very proud of.
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