He doesn’t fit in—a gritty, wise-cracking, world-weary homicide detective from the mean streets of Los Angeles. Now transplanted to Roanoke, a smaller city in Virginia, and striking it out on his own.
BOOK ONE The first client at Mack's new office is a stunner, a knockout in designer khakis. She’s also the sheriff. Seems trouble has followed Mackenzie from the West Coast and Sheriff Stackhouse needs his help…
A dangerous criminal has moved to town, a heavy hitter mobilizing the drug trade. Mackenzie’s job? Go undercover teaching at an inner city school and scour the halls for information leading to criminal’s identity. It’s a task that could result in a deadly showdown and threaten everyone Mack loves…
BOOK TWO Meet Veronica Summers. She's a femme fatale in Jimmy Choo heels--a local attorney needing the services of a private investigator.
She's come to the right place. Mackenzie August is hired to sniff out a traitorous informant hiding in an underworld operation. It's an assignment he should turn down--if only someone other than Ronnie Summers had asked, maybe he could have...
Mackenzie is tossed into the deep end and finds himself mingling with the mafioso. Is his professional career worth risking for the sake of a cute girl with sordid secrets?
I read the first book, bought the box set and read each of those, too - joined Kindle unlimited so I could read them all - weighing the costs of subscription vs. ownership.
Mackenzie August is a brilliant conflicted Private Investigator. His personal ethics wins him friends and enemies and makes enemies friends...while he's being shot at, tortured, and escaping near death at every turn. He's a card and a card shark. He's humor is sometimes sarcastic and sometimes sophisticated, but always funny. I read passages out loud to my husband
He values friendships and makes every person he meets at least think about life goals and what the loss of them would mean.
Oh, and he's the father of a toddler (well not quite toddling to Mac's chagrin) whom Mac loves devotedly.
These are still good stories but the last book lost me in all of the technical grammar. Not only am I a prolific reader but I read the dictionary as a child for fun. I have to say that some of these words I have never seen before. Thank goodness for the dictionary on Kindle. In that context I would also say to the author stop using the same phrasing. The ‘I’m hilarious’ comment gets really old. Ronnie is a damaged individual and I can’t see how she goes on with a life that has any level of normalcy. Hopefully I’m wrong about that but the quasi relationship between Mack and Ronnie is getting really old for me as well.
A fun read! Like Spenser, if he’d gotten dizzy from a tilt-a-whirl.
I would have given five stars, but this collection needs a copy editor in a bunch of places. Also, the set up of book one doesn’t quite match the rewritten free book, The Last Teacher (which is a prequel novel). And, as a nitpick… I train and coach mma, if you don’t have a ground game, it’s hard to be considered a mma fighter. A few have tried it (and even done well - for a time) though eventually they get caught by the very thing they can’t do (or do well).
Have really enjoyed these 3 books about Mack MacKenzie, little Kix, Manny and all the drama they manage to get involved in. I’m a little worried as Kix is managing to stay quite the baby with the passage of time, aging very little. That’s something many of us parents wanted to happen in real life anyway. Don’t know why I question it in a novel.
Have enjoyed reading this earlier part of Manny’s life after reading his own saga. I think you will also love these men and their connections.
At long last, this genre is brilliantly illuminated once again. Robert Parker is one of my favorite authors, and I have really been somewhat despondent since he passed away. Enter upon the scene, Alan Lee, a truly great Parker-esque author. Lee spins a good tale, full of main character intelligence, wit, humorous quick banter, loylty and yes, full of basically great personal character; and a non-PC PI; On who doesn't whine and shrink from the need to kill someone, or break their things when necessary. Kudos to the author!
I started reading the first book of three in a set. I soon realized there was a prequel, so found it, read it, and went back to first book. I have now finished the set of three and will aggressively find the rest of the books this man has written and read them. Wonderful books, part mystery, part humor and thoroughly wonderful!! Would give them ten stars if I could.😁😍
I have enjoyed several books of the tale of Mack his family, friends and enemies. I usually feel like I am "in on the joke" by the authors verbiage which I find to be accurate and amusing. But this book was too long, in my opinion, and I skipped many redundant pages. I guess I wanted less banter and more story.
Read the whole box in one and a half days.loved it. Can’t wait for more. Great entertainment.Terrific characters.Dashell Hammit Raymond Chandler eat your heart out.Sorry ! Should not speak ill of the greats.Carry on quickly quirky humor and all
Really enjoy this series. The August Max character is witty and has me laughing out loud. Reminds me of one of my favorite authors Robert B Parker and that’s a huge compliment.
I really enjoyed this series and can recommend them enthusiastically. The main character is funny and the dialogue is sharp and witty. These books do ned a little polishing. There are some missing words and typos that annoy and knock the reader out of the story.
I liked it, apt comparison to Mylon Bolitar. I read them straight through, but I think you would enjoy them more if you took a break between each book.
These are fun reads as I have read all of Robert B Parker books and this character has a little bit of Spenser in him that makes for an enjoyable read!!
I just read this collection and I really like it. It was humorous at times and full of action. The pacing is perfect and I couldn't wait to read the next page!