| | The Boxer and the Spy |  | Author: Robert B. Parker Publisher: Listening Library (Audio) Category: Book
List Price: $28.00 Buy New: $18.48 You Save: $9.52 (34%)
Avg. Customer Rating: 18 reviews Sales Rank: 400275
Format: Audiobook, Unabridged Media: Audio CD Edition: Unabridged Reading Level: Young Adult Number Of Items: 4
ISBN: 0739373021 EAN: 9780739373026 ASIN: 0739373021
Publication Date: April 28, 2009 (In 146 Days) Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping Availability: Not yet published
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Product Description Another teen thriller from the New York Times bestselling author of the Spenser mysteries. When a shy high school students body is found washed up on the shore of a quiet New England beach townan apparent suicidefifteen-year-old Terry Novak doesnt know what to think. Something just doesnt add up, so he decides to do some investigating of his own with the help of his best friend, Abby. It doesnt take long before they learn that asking questions puts them in grave danger, and surviving is going to be a fight. Fortunately, Terry has been learning a thing or two about fighting, thanks to a retired boxer named George, who teaches the boy to use his head and always keep his feet set beneath himlessons Terry takes to heart in more ways than one. He will need to. Robert B. Parker, New York Times bestselling author of the Spenser novels, delivers a taut, empowering mystery for young readers.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 13 more reviews...
engaging high school mystery May 6, 2008 14 out of 15 found this review helpful
When the body of Jason Green is found, his classmates, teachers and administrators at Cabot, north of Boston, accept the cops' official findings that he killed himself because he was juiced with "roids". Only student athlete Terry Novak disagrees with the prevalent suicide theory; he knows that Jason may have been a lover, but was not a jock so would not have done steroids to become a landscape designer as the teen planned to be. Terry wonders if his classmate he was murdered.
Terry half persuades his best friend Abby to help him investigate the death. However, he makes little progress until his trainer retired professional boxer George encourages him to hold his head up, jab away, and not quit. Heeding that advice, Terry keeps digging not aware the danger he brings to himself and Abby by someone who wants the ruling to remain suicide.
Obviously targeting the teen crowd, Robert B. Parker provides an engaging high school mystery starring a young sleuth trying to uncover the truth about the recent death of a classmate. With a strong support cast from George to cigarette smoking Beverly, Suzi and Tank to Mr. Principal and more, the story line is fast-paced from the first jab to the last as Terry and Abby follow clues that lead them to danger.
Harriet Klausner
Excellent Young Adult Novel with the Parker Touch May 24, 2008 11 out of 14 found this review helpful
The Boxer and the Spy is Robert B. Parker's second foray into young adult literature. Fans of Parker's Spenser novels will no doubt recognize the character development and plot as a young, 15 year old boy and his smarter than a whip girlfriend set out to find out what happened to a young boy found washed up on the beach dead. Word has it that the young, nerdy boy, Jason Green, committed suicide, possibly as a result of steroids. Our young boxer, Terry Novak, isn't buying it and wants to find out what happened to this boy, even though he knows he'll have to go up against adults to do it. His special friend, Abby, jumps in to help him out as they unravel a plot that poor Jason just accidently stumbled across which led to his murder.
This novel was quite entertaining and enjoyable. It was interesting to see Parker take a 15 year old character and start to build him into the same kind of self-contained man that we see in Spenser. Terry is also somewhat of a loner, with a dead father and always drunk mother, but he raises above this disadvantage. He has found a father figure in a retired boxer, George, who is teaching Terry to box and how to be a man. This relationship is really more interesting than the plot itself, and in some ways more believable.
Overall, I'd have to give this effort a definite thumbs up. I could hardly put it down once I started it.
Great YA Mystery for Reluctant Readers! May 19, 2008 8 out of 10 found this review helpful
Robert B. Parker's sophomore effort into YA fiction delivers more action and better pacing than his first. THE BOXER AND THE SPY is also set in today's world rather than the 1940s as EDENVILLE OWLS was. As an older reader who's been reading Parker's books since the 1970s, the earlier time period was no problem for me, but I wondered how many actual YA readers really understood everything that was going on after World War II.
As in his first novel, Parker develops a mystery for his young protagonist, Terry Novak, that spills out of the adult world. Parker spends a lot of time getting the young heroes acquainted with the adult world, though I believe that today's kids are a lot more acclimated to that world than Parker's characters. Still, Terry Novak is a kid I would have loved to know back when I was a freshman in high school, and I bet there are prospective readers out there who would feel the same way. He's got honor, vision, and a sense of himself that are characteristic of Parker's heroes and heroines.
The mystery wraps around the death of Jason Green. Terry knew Jason as a friend, and the relationship takes on special meaning when Parker reveals the tie that bound them. While everyone else seems content to believe Jason committed suicide, Terry just doesn't buy it. He (the boxer) enlists the aid of his best gal pal, Abby (the spy), and they set about trying to figure out what really happened.
The relationship between Terry and Abby takes on as much weight as the mystery. This isn't surprising to those of use that know Parker the way we do, but I believe the actual YA crowd might like the interaction between the two, though a few of them might wonder about how naive the two are. Today's kids, while not always callous, definitely have an idea of how the real world works in many ways.
Parker's trademark clipped prose and rapid-fire dialogue provides plenty of muscle and drives the story along at a good clip. The scenes are powerful and evocative, without being too demanding. The level the books are written on would serve teachers needing something with an easier reading mechanics while maintaining a high interest. Educations dealing with high-risk students should definitely look into Parker's YA efforts. The short chapters make reading just one more page way too irresistible. Librarians and reading specialists should take note of Parker's YA books for that aspect alone.
I really enjoyed the boxing angle of the story too. Any longtime reader of Parker's works will know that his private eye, Spenser, has a history of being a boxer. The love that Parker obviously holds for the sport is immediately apparent during his accounts of Terry's workouts and talks with George, the black boxer that trains him. However, I would have liked to know more about what brought Terry into the ring and what his mom thought about him boxing. I know the adults are supposed to stay pretty much off screen in a YA book, but this one really cried out for most exposure of Terry and his family life.
Figuring out who the villain is and what's actually going on was relatively easy. The fun part was watching what Terry and Abby were going to do to get to the bottom of the whole mess. I watched how their minds worked as they narrowed toward instated the back, and that made me remember by own childhood. Parker serves up nostalgia for the adults and excitement for the YA readers.
RICK "SHAQ" GOLDSTEIN SAYS: "YOUTH MYSTERY IS A KNOCKOUT!!" June 2, 2008 5 out of 5 found this review helpful
This book is written by the author of the world famous Spenser and Jesse Stone mysteries (among others) Robert B. Parker. This is his second book targeted for the youth market, but I'll be the first to say adults will truly enjoy it also. The reader is first introduced to a shy, young, sad boy by the name of Jason Green. His Father had died and his Mother has buried what's left of her life in a bottle. He didn't like sports so a lot of kids in school thought he was a "sissy". What he did enjoy was old movies and drawing. Each night at dinner his Mother would get drunk and then Jason would have the rest of his night down to a science. He'd go out for a walk down to the beach to a secluded spot to be by himself to think about things, and by the time he got home his Mother would be passed out drunk, and Jason would just go to bed like nothing happened. Then one fateful night while Jason was in his special spot he overheard a man and woman talking about some illegal endeavors, but they couldn't see him. The man and woman were afraid of being seen together so the woman left first. Then the man saw Jason and said: "You heard everything." Jason said: "I didn't hear anything."
The tide later brought in Jason's dead body. The rumor around school was that he had used steroids and committed suicide. The cast of characters that are introduced on both sides of the law form the backbone of the story involving the unrelenting quest to clear Jason's name and uncover the criminal element in William Dawes Regional High School. The main protagonist is fifteen-year-old Terry Novack who is working extremely hard learning how to box from George, a black fifty-five-year-old former boxer who works at the local gym. Terry is extremely dedicated to following all the rules, regulations, and training regimens that George sets out. The idea is to find out if Terry truly has the proper character to be a boxer before he actually gets in the ring. Throughout the story George is instrumental not only in the physical and mental part of boxing, but he also conveys sage advice to Terry in his own unique brand of English, that includes numerous sentences that are devoid of many integral verbs and adjectives. Terry's trusty sidekick is his good friend and burgeoning love interest Abby Hall. Abby is a tremendous student, extremely cute, and becomes the "spy" to Terry's "boxer" in this coming of age story of loyalty and the many obstacles in growing up in today's young world of dwindling role models.
While just about all the other kids in school thought Jason was gay and didn't care that he died, Terry remembered that years ago when his own Dad had died, that the day of his Dad's wake, "there was a kid, by himself, Jason Green, wearing a suit coat and tie. He walked past the funeral parlor man at the door, who looked at him as if he didn't belong, and came straight up to Terry. Hi, he said. I wanted to tell you something. My Father died when I was ten, Jason said, after a while you won't feel so bad as you do now. Terry nodded. You'll get used to it, Jason said. Terry nodded again. I just wanted you to know, Jason said. Thank you, Terry said. Thanks for coming."
That memory empowered Terry to enlist his (girl) friend Abby and all their other friends as they fought the powers that be at the school that included the muscle-bound hot-tempered principal Mr. Bullard, All-State football player Kip Carter, and even Gubernatorial candidate Mrs. Trent, as Terry would not be stopped short of his goal of clearing Jason's name. Terry, Abby, and their friends tackle the questions of steroid use, first kisses, and love and sex, at the right time in the right way.
I recommend this book to readers all across the age spectrum. Parents can feel very confident that if they give this book as a gift to teenagers that the right message will be presented. Older Robert B. Parker fans will take a small delight in recognizing characteristics in George that resemble Hawk, and Terry and Abby could almost be a teenage Spenser and Susan. A delightful book.
A young person's read....not sure what age exactly. June 7, 2008 3 out of 6 found this review helpful
I have read literally all 50+ Robert B. Parker books, I did not realize this was a young person's book when I ordered it. The story line of the boxer and the spy, both young high school students investigating what really happened to another student who 'committed suicide' is well developed, just slow moving. There are interwoven plots with other high school students and authority figures which add intrigue to the story.
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