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Sizzling Sixteen (Stephanie Plum Novels)

Sizzling Sixteen (Stephanie Plum Novels)
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Sizzling Sixteen (Stephanie Plum Novels)

 
 
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Description

Trenton, New Jersey, bounty hunter Stephanie Plum has inherited a “lucky” bottle from her Uncle Pip. Problem is, Uncle Pip didn’t specify if the bottle brought good luck or bad luck. . . .

BAD LUCK:

Vinnie, of Vincent Plum Bail Bonds, has run up a gambling debt of $786,000 with mobster Bobby Sunflower and is being held until the cash can be produced. Nobody else will pay to get Vinnie back, leaving it up to Stephanie, office manager Connie, and file clerk Lula to raise the money if they want to save their jobs.

GOOD LUCK:

Being in the business of tracking down people, Stephanie, Lula, and Connie have an advantage in finding Vinnie. If they can rescue him, it will buy them some time to raise the cash.

BAD LUCK:

Finding a safe place to hide Vinnie turns out to be harder than raising $786,000. Vinnie’s messing up Mooner’s vibe, running up pay-per-view porn charges in Ranger’s apartment, and making Stephanie question genetics.

GOOD LUCK:

Between a bonds office yard sale that has the entire Burg turning out, Mooner’s Hobbit-Con charity event, and Uncle Pip’s lucky bottle, they just might raise enough money to save the business, and Vinnie, from ruin.

BAD LUCK:

Saving Vincent Plum Bail Bonds means Stephanie can keep being a bounty hunter. In Trenton, this involves hunting down a man wanted for polygamy, a turnpike toilet paper bandit, and a drug dealer with a pet alligator named Mr. Jingles.

GOOD LUCK:

The job of bounty hunter comes with perks in the guise of Trenton’s hottest cop, Joe Morelli, and the dark and dangerous security expert, Ranger. With any luck at all, Uncle Pip’s lucky bottle will have Stephanie getting lucky---the only question is . . . with whom?

Sizzling Sixteen . . . so hot, the pages might spontaneously combust!


Product Details
Author:Janet Evanovich
Hardcover:320 pages
Publisher:St. Martin's Press
Publication Date:June 22, 2010
Language:English
ISBN:0312383304
Product Length:9.37 inches
Product Width:6.46 inches
Product Height:1.3 inches
Product Weight:1.11 pounds
Package Length:9.3 inches
Package Width:6.2 inches
Package Height:1.2 inches
Package Weight:1.1 pounds
Average Customer Rating: based on 610 reviews

Customer Reviews
Average Customer Review:3.0 ( 610 customer reviews )
Write an online review and share your thoughts with other customers.

Most Helpful Customer Reviews

438 of 476 found the following review helpful:


2More fizzle than sizzle...  Jun 28, 2010 By Cheryl Shifflet
Having read the vast majority of the Stephanie Plum series by Janet Evanovich, I was more than a little excited about the latest installment in the series. I pre-ordered it for my Kindle and began reading it on the subway ride the morning it was released. That alone should tell you how eager I was about the release of this book. Unfortunately, not only did it fall short of my expectations (I also found a downside to the Kindle, you can't chuck it across the room when you're ticked-off like a regular book), but left me incredibly frustrated.

While I'm used to the madcap adventures of Stephanie, Lula, and Grandma Mauzer I was more than a little put off with the pure insanity of this book. First off there was this lucky bottle, which is made out of glass that Stephanie carries around in her handbag throughout most of the story. I'm still trying to figure out how it never broke, especially considering she was chased by an alligator at one point (don't ask!) and ran off a collapsing fire escape.

Also not to mention the fact that Ranger willing gave her two cars (which of course end up destroyed). I'm certain he likes her a whole lot, but I don't think anyone could like someone so much so that they would let them destroy two vehicles and not make her pay for them. Odd. What was also odd was how she was saved when she was in a terrible pickle, Hobbits anyone?

My other biggest issue was the sheer amount of Lula I had to endure. Don't get me wrong Lula is a fun character, but in moderation. I felt like she was in every scene, spewing bad grammar at every turn. At some point it grated on my nerves and I almost wished the alligator would've eaten her! Mean I know, but there's only so much tight pink spandex and Cluck-in-a-Bucket a girl can take.

The most glaring problem is the continuous flip-flopping Stephanie does when it comes to her love life. Nothing developed on this front at all. No choice has been made. She moons for Ranger when she sees him and then longs for Joe when she's in his presence. I don't know how either man tolerates her inability to commit to one of them for more than a week. It's getting a bit played out.

Janet, it's time Stephanie grew up. She grumbles constantly about how much she hates bounty hunting, well get another job and/or settle down! She can't bring herself to decide who she wants as a permanent fixture in her life. She needs to stop stringing two guys along like a sixteen year old who can't decide if she wants to take the cool motorcycle bad boy or the star quarterback to the prom. I understand that if she does one or both of these things the series is over, but maybe it's for the best. It's been a fun, wacky ride and I've enjoyed every minute until this installment. The next book should be called Sayonara Seventeen.

200 of 215 found the following review helpful:


2Sizzle? Did I Miss Something?  Jun 23, 2010 By Red Head
I love this series but I completely agree with other reviewers. There was no sizzle at all. Yes, it had very funny moments that reminded me of Plum books past, but the redundancy of said humor, action sequences and even style of writing made this book almost tedious. In fact, the comedy and action is starting to play like a sitcom...and I don't want to read a book that plays like a tv show.

The men 'in' her life were hardly 'in' her life, as we didn't see much of them in this one. Please, PLEASE make a decision about your love life Stephanie. It's gotten very old and extremely stale.

I know I keep coming back because I want to see some movement, some resolution, in her love life and her professional life, and its just not happening.

145 of 155 found the following review helpful:


2Stone-cold Sixteen...  Jun 27, 2010 By Cynthia K. Robertson
I have been a Janet Evanovich-junkie from the very beginning. Maybe it's because I'm from New Jersey and live less than 20 miles from The Burg. Maybe it's because Evanovich's bounty hunter, Stephanie Plum is funny, irreverent, outrageous and unpredictable. Even the books that weren't as good as her first efforts were still entertaining, with at least a few great belly-laughs. Well, I'm sorry to say that her latest, Sizzling Sixteen, could be called Stone-Cold Sixteen instead. This book is barely entertaining--and mostly stupid. I hate to admit this, but it's the truth.

Stephanie works for a bonding agency run by her cousin Vinnie. Unfortunately, Vinnie has run up gambling debts with his bookie. The bookie has him kidnapped with the threat to kill if the money isn't forthcoming by Friday. Worried about losing their jobs, Stephanie, Lula and Connie decide that they must act. Their first goal is to find Vinnie. Afterward, they'll try to come up with the money. This plot is pretty lame, and if that isn't enough, it's filled with cows running through the streets of Trenton, a 6 foot alligator that guards drug money in a private home and a hobbit convention. There are enough donut and chicken stops to swear you off grease for the rest of your life.

Some of the best parts of Sizzling Sixteen are Evanovich's descriptions. As for Trenton, The Burg "is a neighborhood of hardworking second-generation Americans. Families are extended and proudly dysfunctional. Although dysfunction in Jersey might be hard to measure." As for Plum's relationship issues with Joe Morelli and Ranger, "I was in a state because I had two men in my life, and I had no clue what to do with them....I was too traditional and Catholic to just enjoy them. How sick is that? I wasn't a practicing Catholic, but I had guilt." Unfortunately, Evanovich's characters have become stale, the antics are boring and the plots are dumb.

It's definitely time for her to get back to her old-self or else, marry off Stephanie and end this series. I always look forward to a new Evanovich, but I'm sorry that I spent the money for this one.

72 of 75 found the following review helpful:


1Please, no more!  Jun 30, 2010 By Reads A Lot
Like a programmed autobot, I bought this book because I already own the other 15 in the series, which I used to love. After I read the first chapter, I was already bored with the same old, same old, Same Old! At least I could throw it across the room & vent my frustration; I feel for the Kindle-owner who posted that she wanted to do that but couldn't damage her Kindle.
There is nothing new here - no character development, in fact, the characters are devolving. The juvenile humor (no offense to juveniles) is groan-inducing. Actually, some of the juvenile humor I've seen on YouTube is genuinely funny. You won't find funny here. Annoying and boring, yes, but forget funny. As for suspense, there is none. Plot - it's beyond tired, it's moribund.
I feel like an enabler, buying these sub-par books that read like they've been cut & pasted by a ghostwriter who flunked creative writing in high school. With no editing, of course. The reviewer who posted that the next book should end the series and be called Sayanora Seventeen said it all.
I am pledging not to buy any more Stephanie Plum books, and if I buy the next one next year, I'm going to join a support group because I'll clearly need help.

51 of 52 found the following review helpful:


1Implausible!  Nov 01, 2010 By Paula from NC
After reading this book I decided to voice my opinion directly to the contact page of Evanovich.com

I wrote:
I am a HUGE Evanovich fan and have been for years. I look forward to her newest "Plum" book and always know that a few weeks before my birthday (6/23) it is due to hit the shelves. I have a question. My question is what has changed? It seems like the last two or three books have not been true to the series. It seems like they were rushed or something. I was talking with a lady at my local bookstore and we decided that the series seems to be suffering. If Ms Evanovich is stretched too thin with all of her other series maybe she needs to consider wrapping up the plum series before too much damage has been done. I will give the series one more year and after that I will make my decision on future issues.

I received this back:
Ken here, Alex's assistant. I'm helping with email.

Different strokes for different folks, I guess. Janet has no plans to end the Plum series. Smokin' Seventeen will be out next June.

Best,
Ken Wilson
**************
Wow really? That is probably the most unprofessional response from an assistant I have ever read. If he has ever read the book reviews here on Amazon he would see maybe some different key "strokes" should be made before they lose more DEVOTED fans like I was! You see I am a small business owner and I am also an avid reader and book collector. I was going to " give the series one more year and after that I will make my decision on future issues" but, after Ken's "heartfelt" response they don't have to worry about two things:

1. I will NEVER spend another penny to support any Evanovich Books. In fact I will be taking all of my books written by Ms. Evanovich to a used book store to purge my collection of ALL 37 Evanovich books I have collected over the years.

2. I will NEVER recommend any Evanovich Books to any of my friends or customers. After I read a good book (past or present) I generally talk about it with my customers and recommend different books for consideration.

Look at the data I have provided directly from Amazon and see if you notice a trend!

Sizzling Sixteen: Average 2.5 Stars (247 out of 453 gave it either a 1 or 2 Star)

Finger Licking Fifteen: Average 3 Stars ( 233 out of 526 gave it either a 1 or 2 Star)

Fearless Fourteen: Average 3 Stars (192 out of 537 gave it either a 1 or 2 Star)

Lean Mean Thirteen: Average 4 Stars (51 out of 389 gave it either a 1 or 2 Star)

Twelve Sharp: Average 4 Stars (45 out of 413 gave it either a 1 or 2 Star)

Eleven On Top: Average 4 Stars (47 out of 369 gave it either a 1 or 2 Star)

See all 610 customer reviews on Amazon.com
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