Butcher’s Moon

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Butcher’s Moon audiobook

Hi, are you looking for Butcher’s Moon audiobook? If yes, you are in the right place! ✅ scroll down to Audio player section bellow, you will find the audio of this book. Right below are top 5 reviews and comments from audiences for this book. Hope you love it!!!.

Review #1

Butcher’s Moon audiobook free

This is a standard review for the University of Chicago published Parker series by Richard Stark. Overall the quality of the stories is very high. They are tightly plotted with dialogue fitted to the voices of the different characters. The descriptions of places and objects are brief but clear and connected to the characters’ perceptions.

Now the negatives: These stories average about $9.99, and I expect that some editing must have been done to warrant so high a price for what are rather short novels. There are egregious editing errors in every book in the series, some with only a few, most noticeably the first four books in the series. The rest have over a dozen spelling and grammar errors that were no doubt due to the OCR scanning process on the original books/manuscripts. The software just can’t identify certain words and doesn’t always fix hyphenated words back to whole words. Having the choice all over again, I would look for the paper backs and read those. The books just aren’t worth the $9.99 average price.

Review #2

Butcher’s Moon audiobook in series Parker

I don’t even know what to say. I just finished a binge read of the Parked series. Started with Comeback and then on to the last. All fantastic and put Parker up there with Spenser and Rapp as the greatest characters of all time for me.

So I went back to The Hunter and on to here at Butchers Moon. I was aware that this was (probably?) intended to be the last Parker book. It was perfect. Not only the best story yet but a reunion of characters and brief memories of previous adventures. What a perfect ending — but thank goodness Westlake decided to bring Parker back because the comeback books are the best in the series (with the exception of Butchers Moon, which is the best).

Review #3

Audiobook Butcher’s Moon by Richard Stark

The last few installments in the Parker series kinda waned for me-a little disjointed and confused. However, Butcher’s Moon was great! Tightly written, a host of murky characters and excitement on every page. My guess is Westlake planned for this to be the last in the series, since he took a twenty year break afterwards. However, he seems to have changed his mind along the way because Parker lives, but we’ll see in the future (no spoilers please). I thoroughly enjoy this series, however without a doubt Butcher’s Moon is the best, at least from the perspective of this reader and fan.

Review #4

Audio Butcher’s Moon  narrated by John Chancer

I’ve been reading the series, and Richard Stark’s Butcher’s Moon, 16th in the series, is among my favorites. It’s classic Parker.

As in all Parker novels, crime is a business. Not good. Not bad.

Parker’s objective is always someone else’s money…usually enough to live on for a year or so. There are no moral judgments. Parker is just as bad as he seems. He possesses a professional code of honor: loyalty and respect for fellow professional thieves with whom he has worked in the past. He is deeply suspicious of new amateurish thieves. He’s violent without hesitation but only if he needs to be. He misses nothing. And no Parker novel would be complete without the double-cross.

Parker is impatient with small-talk. He talks only if it serves a purpose. Odd to think that the untalkative Parker reserves for himself the most difficult task of handling people–both fellow thieves as well as the victims.

A Parker story generally has these parts: 1) Planning the heist and assembling the team, 2) carrying out the heist that sometimes goes bad, 3) getting away, and 4) dealing with a double-cross. In Butcher’s Moon, it is about recovering from a previously busted heist and declaring war on the mob.

In Butcher Moon, Parker has a sense of justice, settles old grievances , confronts the mob and its misplaced arrogance and complacency, exquisitely plans the caper (one of his more complex ones), brings in his “friends” (though Parker has no friends, only acquaintances trusted in battle), uses violence always with a purpose, anticipates the usual double-crosses, and shows concern for his trusted compadre and personality opposite Grofield.

Review #5

Free audio Butcher’s Moon – in the audio player below

I bought it because I love Parker books and my brother told me this was the best one ever. It wasn’t. It was an enjoyable read for cognoscenti of Parker because it is the final volume, and cunningly mentions every previous book in the series, but I didn’t find it truly satisfying as a stand alone.But then Richard Stark sets a very high bar.

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