Book cover of One for the Money

Book description

Stephanie Plum is down on her luck. She's lost her job, her car's on the brink of repossession, and her apartment is fast becoming furniture-free.

Enter Cousin Vinnie, a low-life who runs a bail-bond company. If Stephanie can bring in vice cop turned outlaw Joe Morelli, she stands to pick…

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Why read it?

18 authors picked One for the Money as one of their favorite books. Why do they recommend it?

Oh. My. God. I can't believe it took me this long to discover Stephanie Plum. Yes, as mysteries go the plot is maybe a tiny bit light on the mystery element, but the humor and the characters and the writing style are absolutely my happy place. I laughed out loud. I blazed through a bunch of books in the series after discovering this first one and I'm going to read them all.

I love listening to Evanovich’s hilarious tales of Stephanie Plum’s misadventures as a wannabe bail/bondsman. These books are my wife’s and my favorite distraction on long road trips. While her mysteries may be thin, her characters are so real and her stories so crazy, I didn’t miss the whodunit. I included her in this August list because she captures the seedy side of Trenton, New Jersey, with amazing clarity, even while laughing at the place.

I picture myself riding in one of her cars—which she destroys regularly—along with her friend, the former ho, LuLu, hair flowing in the stinky wind…

Years ago, a fellow writer recommended the Stephanie Plum series to me as a must-read because the writing was so laugh-out-loud funny. She wasn’t kidding. Not only did I find this incredibly entertaining, I laughed all the way through the book and became a huge fan of the series.

Hanging out in the Jersey “burg” with Stephanie and her family, for me, is just plain fun. Is it improbable that an unemployed lingerie buyer could become a successful bail-bond recovery agent and apprehend a savvy cop on the run? Especially when she has some personal history with the guy? You…

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Book cover of To Dye For

To Dye For by Greta Boris,

Imogene’s client has a special request. The only hitch is, the client is dead. It’s an ordinary day at Harry’s Hair Stop until Imogene hears her favorite client’s dying wish. Two days later, she finds herself in the embalming room at Greener Pastures Mortuary, bottle of hair dye and scissors…

One of the first modern cozy mysteries I have ever read, Stephanie Plum is zany, ridiculous, and laugh-out-loud funny. Basically, she’s a bounty hunter, and she gets her man and solves mysteries despite herself. Her Grandma Mazur is quite possibly one of the best sidekick characters ever invented. Funerals may or may not involve dead bodies, but Granny Mazur will be there anyway, even if it means stealing a corpse. Especially if it means stealing a corpse! Stephanie has a habit of losing cars and getting stuck driving a very old boat of a car (Big Buick), which deprives her…

I used to commute to London for years and read a huge amount on the train journey in and out of that city. I remember one day I was sitting in the carriage and someone reached across the table between us and touched my hand. I looked up, and the person opposite asked me what I was reading. I asked them why they wanted to know, and they said, “Because you’ve been laughing all the way into London.”

I loved Stephanie’s method of wheedling a job out of Vinnie by threatening to air his dirty secrets, her Grandma’s obsession with…

From Mike's list on characters that shine through.

A list of badass women sleuths isn’t complete without Stephanie Plum. I love her humor and determination. And I adore her street smarts and emotional intelligence.

No, she’s not an intellectual heavyweight like some women I’ve mentioned. But I’d argue that her gift for always finding a way to save herself and catch the killer is its own kind of brilliance. And nobody writes a fun fight scene like Evanovich!

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Book cover of Party Planning Can Be Murder

Party Planning Can Be Murder by Kerry Schafer,

Murder, media, mayhem—and maybe love—await in this witty small-town mystery, perfect for fans of Stephanie Plum and Finlay Donovan.

Despite a few harrowing incidents with nervy Bridezillas, Addy Winters’ small town party planning business has been 100% murder free—until now. Everything changes when her former classmate, now a legendary rockstar,…

Okay, Evanovich has written seven million Stephanie Plum mysteries, but they are truly funny. Best start with the first one, when we were all young and had golden hair (highlights?).

The humor is smart and not sophomoric. I’m an improv comic and there is a difference between being juvenile and crude, and being clever. Check her clever Plum series out if you want to laugh. There are so many of them you could also use them to build that upstairs addition you’ve been planning.

An old friend gave me her much-thumbed copy of Evanovich’s One for the Money at a time when I was down.

I can’t tell you how much the book lifted me up—Stephanie Plum’s debut in the long-running series as a sharp, sometimes bumbling bounty hunter is laugh-out-loud funny. Her love interests only complicate matters: the dark, handsome, elusive Ranger, and Morelli, a cop on the run who Stephanie lost her virginity to when she was sixteen.

Of course, I raced through the numbers with Stephanie, right up into the books entitled twenty-something. Evanovich’s seemingly effortless writing style hooks the reader…

Oldie, but a goodie. Even better, once you’ve read the first book, you’ll be relieved to find the adventures of Stephanie Plum, amateur bounty hunter, keep going.

If you like mysteries, comedy, and a little steamy romance, this is your series with plenty of books to read. The dinner scene with Grandma Mazur had me in stitches, as did… well, you’ll have to pick up a copy to see what I mean. 

From Michelle's list on fun reads to read in dark times.

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Book cover of Flashes of Insight

Flashes of Insight by Lynda Allen,

Mood swings and insomnia are one thing, hot flash-induced psychic visions are quite another. When Olivia Wilde realizes the visions she’s experiencing in the midst of hot flashes are actually premonitions, she must learn to understand and trust what she sees in order to help a friend, preserve a piece…

You may have noticed there’s a bit of a theme here, well, other than that I love all these books, but this introduction to Stephanie Plum and her entourage is a great book that keeps me coming back when I’m in the mood for a laugh and a look at a family that’s even crazier than mine.

Stephanie is down and out, and out of desperation, blackmails her cousin into giving her a shot at bounty hunter. Experience? Who needs experience? Her first skip? An ex-cop she’s had more than a few run-ins with…usually without all her clothing.

Stephanie, her…

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Book cover of To Dye For

To Dye For by Greta Boris,

Imogene’s client has a special request. The only hitch is, the client is dead. It’s an ordinary day at Harry’s Hair Stop until Imogene hears her favorite client’s dying wish. Two days later, she finds herself in the embalming room at Greener Pastures Mortuary, bottle of hair dye and scissors…

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