Mr Paradise

Unabridged
Author: Elmore Leonard
Narrator: Robert Forster
Genres: Fiction, Mystery, Thriller
Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers
Date: January 2004
Length: 8 hours
Ratings:
Formats:
  • CD
  • WMA

Overview

Roommates Kelly and Chlöe are enjoying their lives and their downtown Detroit loft just fine. Kelly is a Victoria's Secret catalog model. Chlöe is an escort, until she decides to ditch her varied clientele in favor of a steady gig as girlfriend to eighty-four-year-old retired lawyer Tony Paradiso, a.k.a. Mr. Paradise.

Evenings at Mr. Paradise's house, there's always an old Michigan football game on TV. And when Chlöe's around, there's a cheerleader, too, complete with pleated skirt and blue-and-gold pompoms. One night Chlöe convinces Kelly to join in the fun, along with Montez Taylor, Tony's smooth-talking right-hand man.

But things go awry and before the end of the evening there will be two corpses, two angry hit men, one switch of identity, a safe-deposit box full of loot up for grabs, and, fast on the scene, detective Frank Delsa, who now has another double homicide -- and this one with a beautiful, willful witness -- to add to his already heavy caseload.

With a cool cast, snappy dialogue, and all the twists and turns fans crave, Mr. Paradise is Elmore Leonard at home in Detroit and sharper than ever.

Reviews (6)

Mr Paradise

Written by Anonymous on April 14th, 2007

  • Book Rating: 3/5

If you like Elmore Leonard books, you will like this one. Robert Forrester's narration was excellent. Thoroughly enjoyed the story. A little too short, though.

Mr. Pardise

Written by Charles Gartner on May 17th, 2005

  • Book Rating: 2/5

Not one of Elmore Leonard's best. It did not seem to me that the things that happened in the book were believable.

Mr Paradise

Written by Anonymous from Glen Cove, NY on January 10th, 2005

  • Book Rating: 1/5

I didn't find the plot, characters or ending believable. Since Elmore writes so much dialog I thought that I would enjoy him more on tape....not! Now I'm sure that I don't enjoy his writing.

Mr. Paradise

Written by Joan Costello on November 11th, 2004

  • Book Rating: 4/5

Reviewing Elmore Leonard's work is difficult, because he must compete with himself, and he is one of the best. "Mr. Paradise" is excellent. It is classic Leonard with its terse, colorful dialogue, its rapid yet comprehensive character development, and writing style that has swat. As far as Leonard's complete works are concerned, however, nothing can compare with his historical novels for information and impact. Also, it seems that this particular story fades a bit in the concluding chapters. He does not finish strong in this one. Still, it is Elmore Leonard, and it is a great read (well, listen).

Mr Paradise

Written by Elizabeth Lewis on September 12th, 2004

  • Book Rating: 1/5

I couldn't get past the second chapter because the man reading the book sounded like he'd rather being doing anything else. Beware: there is a lot of swearing in this book!

Keeps you guessing..

Written by abr on August 6th, 2004

  • Book Rating: 4/5

I really enjoyed this audiobook, a good mystery and interesting story!

Author Details

Author Details

Leonard, Elmore

"Elmore Leonard became interested in writing in 1935, after reading a serialization of All Quiet on the Western Front in the Detroit Times. Touched by the story, he wrote a play based on the novel for his fifth-grade classroom, using the desks as ""No-Man's-Land."" In high school he wrote a story or two for the school paper but spent most of his time reading. After graduating in 1943 Leonard joined the navy and served with a Seabee unit in the South Pacific. He left the service in 1946 and enrolled at the University of Detroit. At the university he began writing again, entering short story contests and placing third in one of them. He graduated in 1950 with a major in English and philosophy.

In 1949, while still in college, Leonard joined the Campbell-Ewald advertising agency. He also began writing in earnest during this period. He had his first success in 1951 when Argosy magazine published his short story ""Trail of the Apache."" Other stories?all westerns?followed in such publications as Zane Grey Western and The Saturday Evening Post. In 1953 Leonard published his first novel, The Bounty Hunters, followed by four more over the next eight years. Between 1951 and 1961 he published 30 short stories, five novels, and made two sales to the movies. When his novel Hombre was chosen as one of the best westerns of all time by the Western Writers of America in 1961, Leonard finally felt confident enough to quit the advertising agency and devote all of his time to writing.

As the market for westerns began to dry up, however, Leonard found himself writing educational films for Encyclopaedia Britannica, industrial films for corporations and advertising and sales material. He switched from westerns to crime with the publication of The Big Bounce. During the 1970s and 1980s he developed a devoted following with his novels Fifty-two Pickup, City Primeval, Stick and LaBrava. When Glitz was published in 1985, it became Leonard's ""breakout"" bestseller; he began to receive long-overdue attention, including a Newsweek cover story. Each of his novels since then?Bandits, Touch, Freaky Deaky, Killshot, Get Shorty, Maximum Bob, Rum Punch, Pronto, Riding the Rap, Out of Sight and Cuba Libre ?has been a national bestseller as well as a critical success.

Three of Leonard's books have been nominated for the Edgar Allan Poe Award by the Mystery Writers of America: The Switch, nominated for Best Original Paperback Novel of 1978; Split Images, for Best Novel of 1981; and LaBrava, which won for Best Novel in 1983. Maximum Bob was also awarded the first annual International Association of Crime Writers' North American Hammett Prize in 1991. In 1992 the Mystery Writers gave Leonard the Grand Master Award, which ""is presented only to individuals who, by a lifetime of achievement, have proved themselves preeminent in the craft of the mystery and dedicated to the advancement of the genre.""

Success has followed Leonard to Hollywood as well. Released in October 1995, ""Get Shorty,"" starred John Travolta and was an immediate critical and commercial success; the same is true of ""Out of Sight,"" which starred George Clooney and was released in June 1998. Award-winning director Quentin Tarantino (""Pulp Fiction"") directed ""Jackie Brown,"" a film based on Leonard?s novel Rum Punch, in December 1997. Tarantino also plans to bring three more Leonard novels to the silver screen: Bandits, Freaky Deaky and Killshot. Leonard's 34th novel, Cuba Libre, is a story of high adventure, history, romance and nefarious undertakings in Cuba. The film rights to the novel, which was released in February 1998, were bought by Joel and Ethan Coen of ""Fargo"" fame. ""Maximum Bob"" was an ABC-TV miniseries starring Beau Bridges.

In September 1998, Dell published The Tonto Woman and Other Western Stories and also issued a trade paperback trilogy of Elmore Leonard?s Western Roundups (#1, #2, #3), one each month, from October through December 1998. Delacorte Press will publish Be Cool, the follow-up to Get Shorty, in February 1999.

A full-length biography, Elmore Leonard, by David Geherin, was published by Continuum as part of their Literature and Life series. Leonard was also the subject of an hour-long documentary produced in 1991 by the BBC, entitled ""Elmore Leonard's Criminal Record""; the documentary has aired in the United States on The Learning Channel.

Elmore Leonard is the father of five children and the grandfather of nine. He and his wife live in a suburb of Detroit, Michigan. "