Reviews

Top Secret Twenty-One by Janet Evanovich

vlreid's review

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4.0

Another laugh-out-loud Stephanie Plum adventure. Who cares about the plot? I just love the characters!

kathydavie's review

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3.0

First read September 29, 2014.

Twenty-first in the Stephanie Plum funny romantic suspense series and revolving around the bumbling Stephanie Plum, bounty hunter. Set in Trenton, New Jersey.

My Take
Whew, Evanovich is getting back on track. Oh, it’s still missing what I consider crucial bits, notably a lack of sexual heat with Joe and Ranger. But it doesn’t feel as though Evanovich is going through the motions as some of her latest books have seemed.

I’ve always enjoyed the conflict Stephanie has over Ranger and Joe, and the heat that Evanovich creates between them, but that heat is just going through the motions. Ranger does say at one point that he seriously considers marrying Stephanie. It’s a statement that titillates at first until the idea percolates in and I wanna smack him. I don’t know if it’s because it just comes out of the blue or if Evanovich hasn’t set this up with any emotion.

Oops, lol, it used to be Stephanie’s mom slugged the booze in secret. Now she’s soaking the meatloaf in it.

It cracks me up that Ranger is tracking Stephanie all the time. It used to piss her off. Now she’s grateful that she’s always on someone’s radar.

Some of the humor is still here. I liked that bit about Morelli being inches from taking what Miriam was offering, lol. Nice double entendre.

Cute. Grandma Mazur has a bucket list with impractical and very un-grandma-like desires. And it seems a little too easy that she got check off several of these. It used to be that Grandma freaked Ranger out. Where is that these days? You know, that’s one of the problems — there’s so little conflict amongst the core characters these days. There was more a sense of family and its internal conflicts.

Jesus, could Stephanie be any more obvious at the bar. And what’s with Leo? Is he that naive? Stephanie knows what her grandma is like, so why would she tell her she’s in Atlantic City?

Hmm, Joe raises an interesting point about the Rangeman building. He thinks “that his building is more secure than it needs to be, and the technology he uses is expensive, complicated, and not readily available”. Heck, and I was figuring it was some kind of deal like the cars and Ranger having an endless supply of black cars.

Well, that settles it. Hell is freezing over. Stephanie is packing a gun AND it has bullets AND she fired it!

The Story
It’s a set-up from the get-go. Someone wants Ranger out of the picture, and he’ll do whatever he has to. But it’s not going fast enough for Stephanie. She doesn’t want someone taking him out.

The Characters
Stephanie Plum is a bounty hunter in Jersey, working for her cousin Vinnie. She also moonlights for Ranger. Grandma Mazur is a crack-up. Her height has shrunk but her skin hasn't, she carries an Eastwood-sized gun, and isn't allowed to drive. Hanging out at funeral home viewings is her idea of fun. Stephanie's mother is long-suffering with the help of ironing and the bottle. Rex is Stephanie's pet hamster.

Plum Bail Bonds is…
…owned by Harry the Hammer, Vinnie's father-in-law. Connie Rosolli is the office manager and guard dog. Lula, a former 'ho, is about as wide as she is tall who overflows all her clothes due to her preference for lycra in sizes way too small.

Joe Morelli is a Trenton detective in the Crimes Against Persons unit. He's also Stephanie's boyfriend. Sort of. Bob is his "his orange, floppy-eared, shaggy-haired dog" who eats everything. His grandmother, Grandma Bella, is a fearsome nutjob who gives people the eye. Anthony is Joe's brother, and he has a family. Bryan Krieder is a fellow plainclothes in the same unit.

Ranger, a.k.a., Carlos Mancuso, is former Special Forces with an aversion to relationships. He's also hot for Stephanie.

Rangeman is…
…his company , a small high-tech, high-end security firm. Tank is his second-in-command. Hal is another of his men. Ella is half of a housekeeping couple who takes care of everyone at Rangeman. Bruce McCready is the unlucky Rangeman employee. Rodriguez is a specialist in hearts. Jose and Ryan are more operatives.

I think Mac is FBI.

Randy Briggs is three-feet tall and a major pain in Stephanie's patootie. He doesn't take no for an answer. He's also Poletti's accountant. He used to be head of security for Central Hospital. Eddie and Bruce are his cousins.

Officer Picky is just that. Dillan Ruddick is the building super at Stephanie's apartment building. He's getting used to putting out fires and repainting Stephanie's apartment. I'm surprised the owner hasn't booted her out. Loretta is Connie's cousin and a nurse at St. Francis. Marjorie Barstock's daughter works at St. Francis too. Mrs. Brodksy and Mr. Grezbek are neighbors and take a dog each.

FTAs
Emilio Gardi is facing a racketeering charge and has been considered untouchable.

Jimmy Poletti is a high money bond who is a failure-to-appear. Trudy is the wife who has been with everyone. Aaron is one of his sons and works at the button factory. Oswald is another son who's not all there. Jimmy's poker-playing associates include Buster Poletti, his cousin; Ron Siglowski; Bernie Scootch; Tommy Ritt; and, Silvio Pepper, who owns Pepper Trucking. Miriam Pepper is Silvio's alcoholic wife. Miguel has a message from the Mexicans.

Stanley Kulicky stole rice pudding and can't cook. Gloria Grimley held up a bakery. Forest Kottel went shoplifting in a grocery store. Now he's taken over most of the Chihuahuas — some are protecting Briggs: Daisy, Ronald, Scooter, Mitzy, Brownie, Puddles, Gracie, Bernie, Blinky, and Boomer.

The Russian consulate in New York City
Leo Stochi is a Russian vodka distributor. Sergei Yablonovich is with the consulate. Vlatko, a.k.a., Viktor Volkov, an SVR thug, assassin, and interrogator is at the embassy as a rep for the Russian Ministry of Industry and Trade.

General Semov is high profile and appearing at a vodka trade show in Atlantic City.

The Cover
The cover is a bright explosive grass green of neon blades of grass forming a background for the author’s name in a deep purple outlined in lime green, a shiny narrow band of yellow streaking across the lower end with the series information, and the title in a gradation of pale yellow to white superimposed on the lower half of the cover.

The title is all Ranger and his exploits: Top Secret Twenty-One, and I can’t tell ya how much I appreciate an author who lets me know where I stand in the series chronologically!

acain8's review

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adventurous funny lighthearted mysterious fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Plot
  • Strong character development? No
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? No

3.0

sam_hartwig's review

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3.0

I wasn't won over by this one. I love these books because they're always a bit of fun, I love the back and forth between characters. It's always punchy and hilarious, but unfortunately there wasn't much spark in this one.

Ok, so I'm sure a lot of people will say "what are you talking about? These books lost their spark ages ago!" But for me I still really enjoyed them. What I didn't like was that there wasn't enough guts to the story, there was too much knocking on doors and not enough mystery. I didn't guess the bad guy but by the end I didn't really care.

Hoping for a bit more excitement in the next one. Highlight of the book was Grandma Mazur seeing Ranger naked and Bob eating a heart of the kitchen bench haha!

applegnreads's review

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3.0

the formula continues... and yet i continue to read them so there must be something here...

brendalovesbooks's review

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3.0

The only way to read this series anymore is on audio while cleaning the house or driving or something. Just as something to help pass the time while you get other stuff done. Of course this is just a repeat of the past 20 books. Surprisingly, though, I don't think anyone escaped out the back door while Stephanie stupidly stands at the front door, which is kind of a miracle. Or did I just miss it?

But anyway, if you're tired of this series and ready to give up on it, I'd say give the audio a try (if you aren't already). The narrator is quite good, even if the writing isn't.

redqueen84's review

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adventurous funny lighthearted mysterious fast-paced

3.75

aubrey710's review

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adventurous funny lighthearted mysterious tense fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? No
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

3.25

wonderland396's review against another edition

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adventurous funny mysterious

4.0

sarahthebookdragon's review

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3.0

First Stephanie Plum/Janet Evanovich book. Read it for a book club. Not bad.