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Michael Brandman
Michael Brandman has produced more than forty motion pictures, including works by Tom Stoppard, Arthur Miller, Neil Simon, David Mamet, Elmore Leonard, Louis L'Amour, Stephen Sondheim, Horton Foote, Eugene O'Neill and Wendy Wasserstein. He co-wrote and/or supervised the writing on eight Jesse... show more
Michael Brandman has produced more than forty motion pictures, including works by Tom Stoppard, Arthur Miller, Neil Simon, David Mamet, Elmore Leonard, Louis L'Amour, Stephen Sondheim, Horton Foote, Eugene O'Neill and Wendy Wasserstein. He co-wrote and/or supervised the writing on eight Jesse Stone movies, each starring Tom Selleck. His three Jesse Stone novels, "Robert B. Parker's 'Killing the Blues'," "Robert B. Parker's 'Fool Me Twice'," and "Robert B. Parker's 'Damned If You Do,'" are all New York Times Best Sellers. He lives in Los Angeles and is married to the award winning actress, Joanna Miles. He is the father of two sons.
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Community Reviews
CarlAlves
CarlAlves rated it 10 years ago
I had previously read one of Parker's novels in the Jesse Stone series and I absolutely hated it. With a new author on board, I figured I would give it a try and I was pleasantly surprised. There were multiple story lines going on this novel. The most prominent is an ex-con Stone had seriously messe...
jbarrett5 book reviews, etc
jbarrett5 book reviews, etc rated it 11 years ago
Robert B. Parker's Damned if You Do (A Jesse Stone Novel)A jesse stone novel-love these crime stories especially the movies on TV starring Tom Selleck. Paradise is a country town, beach tourist town where life is slow. His friend, an accountant is being abused at the nursing home. Love what he disco...
EricCWelch
EricCWelch rated it 11 years ago
I have always preferred the Jesse Stone series over Spenser and was sad that the series never blossomed into many more books. The relationship between Jesse, the town council, and Suitcase and Molly was fun and often led to humorous exchanges between them. After Parker died the series was taken o...
TCWriter
TCWriter rated it 11 years ago
I read Killing the Blues because I was curious; could another writer continue Robert B. Parker's newer Jesse Stone series of mysteries after Parker's death?After page two, it was clear -- the answer was NO.Michael Brandman tries -- and we see evidence of Parker's razor-edged dialog sprinkled through...
Brick
Brick rated it 12 years ago
This was not up to the level of the previous novel in the series and far off the standard when Robert Parker was writing these. Not a police procedural, not a mystery in that Stone's connections to the mob boss allows him to find the perpetrator(s), and the secondary plot is resolved by Stone's wor...
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