Robert B. Parker is certainly the most efficient writer I know of, and perhaps the most agile. Well-known for his Spenser series, the Sunny Randall and Jesse Stone series, he also wrote the Cole and Hitch westerns, a trio of YA novels, and believe it or not, a romance, Love and Glory.
Boone Adams meets Jennifer Grayle at his first college dance in the fall of 1950. He falls in love with her and becomes obsessed with her. That obsession almost destroys him, but in the end it saves him.
Parker chronicles 25 years in 206 pages, but you never feel shorted or slighted. He's able to get more characterization into fewer pages than other writers are able to do in twice the page count. As always, his chapers are short--four to six pages, with the ocassional chapter going to twelve pages. He's wise, funny, irreverant, despairing, and always with crisp, clean dialogue.
I do have a few quibbles with this title. That language here, is stronger, with 10 times the f-bombs than is usually found in his Spenser novels. That was a big surprise. Second while it may have a happy ending, does that ending come at the expense of other lives being thrown into chaos?
But it is a compelling read, nonetheless.