Saturday, August 21, 2010

Book review: SIZZLING SIXTEEN by Janet Evanovich



I started reading the Stephanie Plum series at the recommendation of my mother a few years ago, and found them to be fun, quick reads. Stephanie is likable as a main character because we can relate to her: she lost her job; she has car trouble; she is attracted to men who may not be good for her, but are irresistible; her family drives her crazy, but they love each other. In other words, she's not perfect.

Stephanie ends up working as a bounty hunter for her sleazy cousin, and gets herself into all sorts of scrapes trying to do her job. Most of them are funny, but some of them are real bad guys and she gets herself into dangerous situations from which she must be rescued by either her on again-off again cop boyfriend, her mysterious but sexy coworker, or both.

She is surrounded by a cast of quirky characters, like her grandmother who goes to viewings at funeral homes for entertainment (and cookies), her coworker Lula, who is a former 'ho and is food-obsessed, and various other eccentric characters who come and go.

The problem I have with these books, and it gets worse as they go on, is that no growth or progress is ever made by either Stephanie or anyone else. The things that were funny in the first few books get annoying by the sixteenth, like the fact that Stephanie is still torn between Morelli (the cop) and Ranger (the coworker). All Lula cares about are food and shopping. Stephanie still has to get rescued because she does something impulsive and dangerous.

The jokes are getting stale, as are the characters. At this point, it's just more of the same, and it's not so entertaining anymore.

I would love to see Stephanie make a real decision instead of going with the flow. Ranger and Morelli have a fistfight. Anything to break up the monotony.

Alas, Evanovich has a cottage industry with these books, and I don't see her changing anything significant with her cash cow. That's unfortunate, because life doesn't really work that way. Stagnation is not a good thing, but apparently it's what the fans want: more of the same.

There are so many more interesting books out there, so I think I am done with Stephanie Plum.