Header overlay
Looking for Rachel Wallace; Promised Land
  • ISBN: 9781849162890
  • Pages: 479
  • Publisher: Quercus
  • Binding: Paperback

Looking for Rachel Wallace; Promised Land

Robert B. Parker
From£11.99

SF Subscriber Prices

UK & Ireland £11.99 *save £2.00
Overseas £14.99 *save £2.00

Non-Subscriber Prices

UK & Ireland £13.99
Overseas £16.99
  • Gift wrap available
  • In stock
  • All prices include P&P. Overseas rates & subscriber discounts will be applied once you have selected a shipping type for each item during the checkout process.
  • Special stock order
Non Slightly Foxed title: Minimum 5-10 day delivery time.
If you are a current subscriber to the quarterly your basket will update to show any discounts before the payment page during checkout ● If you want to subscribe now and buy books or goods at the member rate please add a subscription to your basket before adding other items

Two of the finest early Spensers in a single volume – this is Classic Robert B. Parker. In the first novel, Promised Land, Harvey Shepard’s wife has run away.

Spenser has been hired to find her. A seemingly easy mission: go to Cape Cod, find the missing woman, then sit back and enjoy the sun. But it seems there is more to this case than meets the eye.

Who are the shady figures Pam Shepard has been seen with? And why does Harvey keep showing up with bruises? Both Pam and Harvey are in over their heads, and soon Spenser will be too. In the second novel, Looking for Rachel Wallace, Spenser is hired to protect Rachel Wallace, the outspoken feminist. Left-wing lesbian meets muscles and machismo.

Chalk meets cheese. It is not long before Rachel fires him. Then she disappears.

Spenser feels it is his duty to save her. And once he has made up his mind then no bigot, Klansman, or family will get in his way. He will not stop until he finds Rachel Wallace.



Something Cooking

I was passing through Newark, New Jersey, in 2002 when I picked up a paperback thriller in the airport bookstore. It was by Robert B. Parker, a writer I had never heard of, and I can’t remember...

Read more

Comments & Reviews

Leave your review

Your email address will not be published.


Similar Items

Sign up to our e-newsletter

Sign up for dispatches about new issues, books and podcast episodes, highlights from the archive, events, special offers and giveaways.