Parker, who looks like he is “made of chunks of wood” (I like that), is a meticulous, logical and unemotional planner of thefts. Most of the action is straightforwardly narrated; we get to see, if we're interested, and who isn't?-- how a thief with other thieves might pull off a job; hey, it’s a continuously tough economy! You never know what kind of information might be useful! I’m kidding, but there IS an interesting ethical angle to these books, actually; we cheer for a sociopathic anti-hero; what does that make us?
For a guy most people describe as “the strong, silent type,” Parker gets into some over-the-top capers. In The Seventh he and some guys rob a football stadium for the gate receipts during a big game; he takes on the mob in The Outfit; he and a large group knock off a whole North Dakota city! In The Handle he takes on a casino on a small island.
The Baron owns this island in the Gulf of Mexico, to the annoyance of The Outfit, who can’t get at any of the money, and who in this case hires Parker to knock off the casino and put The Baron out of business. One positive feature of this one is that the engagingly funny actor Alan Grofield returns, yay, and the job, while it doesn’t quite go as they planned, does work out entertainingly at the end. Grofield says to Parker: “Talking to you is like talking to one of those statues on Easter Island!” Appropriately amusing.
When Grofield is hurt, we are surprised to see Parker actually goes out of his way to take care of him; Parker likes him!? But it's about loyalty, and Parker is loyal and fair-minded to his team. But we as readers like Grofield, who is as much a professional as Parker, but the opposite of his personality. He becomes so popular as a character and such a favorite of Stark’s that he actually creates four books with Grofield as the main character. Yes, they are worth reading, especially in contrast to the Parker books as a kind of change.
Another attractive feature of this one is that we switch from Parker’s perspective to The Baron’s, who escapes his island by boat with the cash and diamonds to Mexico. He manages to walk with his two suitcases across 21 barren miles inland from the Mexican coast until he meets an old indigenous Mexican. What ensues is worth your time. Everything that happens AFTER the blown heist is better than the action sequences of the heist itself, in my opinion. But over all it is well worth your time.