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| The Cleanup | 
enlarge | Manufacturer: Star Trek Category: EBooks
List Price: $3.49 Buy New: $2.79 You Save: $0.70 (20%)
Avg. Customer Rating: 18 reviews Sales Rank: 23451
Format: Kindle Book Media: Kindle Edition Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 336
Dewey Decimal Number: 813.6 ASIN: B000GCFCT6
Publication Date: April 14, 2006 Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
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Product Description "STARFLEET CORPS OF ENGINEERS During the Dominion War, the Miradorn -- ninety percent of whom are telepathically linked twins -- allied themselves with the Dominion. Now, in the wake of the Alpha Quadrant's victory in that war, the Miradorn are eager to improve their relationship with the Federation -- especially in light of the numerous dangerous devices the Dominion left behind. One of them has killed a Miradorn scientist named Or-Lin. Now, the S.C.E. team on the U.S.S. da Vinci must deactivate the rest of the devices before they become responsible for wiping out the entire Miradorn species -- but the only one who can help them is Or-Lin's twin, Em-Lin, who is still devastated by the death of her sister.... "
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| Customer Reviews: Read 13 more reviews...
Loved "The Cleanup!" October 22, 2008 Here's my review system--I score on four categories and average them together for the number of stars. The four categories are: character development (are the characters deep and complex, plot (is it interesting), voice (is the narration smooth and e...more Here's my review system--I score on four categories and average them together for the number of stars. The four categories are: character development (are the characters deep and complex, plot (is it interesting), voice (is the narration smooth and engaging) and cliche level (is it predictable.)
Character development: 5 stars-- Excellent! i really got a sense of the protag and what he was about.
Plot: 5 stars-- Fantastic suspense and twists.
voice: 5 stars-- Fantastic!
cliche level: 5 stars-- A feeling, emotionally deep vulnerable cop--I love it.
I absolutely love this book. it moves fast, doesn't bore you with cliches and really is fresh.
Not bad for the price, but not a great book July 14, 2008 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
Pretty typical action crime fiction. Good guy hero with some personal problems comes to the rescue of damsel in distress. Makes for a quick read, but nothing memorable about this story.
Do-gooder hoes a hard row February 20, 2008 Officer Matt Worth of the Omaha Police Department is at a personal and career nadir. Recently divorced, he's now on a provisional assignment guarding the theft-prone SaveMore supermarket pending a psychological fitness sign-off after having slugged the Homicide detective that stole his wife. But even in that punch-up, satisfaction was muted as the other guy was the better hitter. In any case, Worth's only current job satisfaction is flirting with the pretty check-out girl, Gwen. But Gwen has an abusive boyfriend, Russell T. James, whom she bludgeons to death with a bedside table lamp while he sleeps after giving her a particularly nasty beating. With no one to turn to but Matt, she shows him her bruises at the hospital ER then the body back at the apartment. Sympathizing with her predicament, Worth decides not to make an arrest but rather to permanently eradicate Russell's corpse and live at let live. It seemed like the right and gentlemanly thing to do at the time.
What Worth doesn't know is that James was employed as a narcotics and drug money courier by Eddie Tice, owner of Tice Is Nice Quality Used and Discount Furniture, who also has two local plain clothes cops on the take. That, and the $260 K gone missing with Russell, makes for an escalating set of complications for the chivalrous Worth.
Worth, who's a perfectly average shmoe both in his personal and professional life, riding a bad situation into a disaster exemplifies one of my personal favorite adages, which is that No Good Deed Goes Unpunished. If you insist on acting out of the goodness of your heart, either do it with complete anonymity or be prepared for an unacceptable gain/loss ratio.
If life imitates art, or vice versa, then THE CLEANUP, a delightfully entertaining piece of unpretentious lit noir, certainly illustrates the Law of Unintended Consequences. Moreover, it's a conveniently quick read, after which you can go back to saving the world.
Working class fiction! January 11, 2008 I was told about Sean Doolittle by another writer who recommended his work. So I bought THE CLEANUP because the description made it look like a good start. Indeed! The really great thing about this book is that the characters are all working class folk. Grocery store clerks, laborers, beat cops, carpenters, slackers, etc. This is not a thriller packed with holier-than-thou professional types from the upper crust of society. I liked that about this book, plus the fact that it was just by-gosh so well written. I very highly recommend this book, and I'll be looking out for Doolitle's other novels!
Tightly Woven December 27, 2007 This is one of the finest paperbacks I've read in years. Sean Doolittle equals Elmore Leonard at his own genre, by which I mean that the dialogue is superbly realistic and the plot moves swiftly along. There are no dull and pointless passages of description (as in Patricia Cornwell) that you're tempted to skip, nor is someone described on each page as lighting a cigarette (as in Patricia Cornwell), nor is there any rhapsodizing over what music the protagonist is listening to. My only complaint is that the anticlimactic ending seems to fall apart and seems hastily thrown together as if Doolittle had to meet a deadline.
Although the novel closely resembles the crime fiction of Elmore Leonard, it made me recall Patricia Highsmith's A Dog's Ransom (Open Market Edition). In both novels, a naive and good-natured young cop stumbles into trouble, then things get worse, then they get real bad.
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