Robert Parker
Robert Parker
Robert Brown Parkerwas an American crime writer. His most famous works were the 40 novels written about the private detective Spenser. ABC television network developed the television series Spenser: For Hire based on the character in the mid-1980s; a series of TV movies based on the character were also produced. His works incorporate encyclopedic knowledge of the Boston metropolitan area. The Spenser novels have been cited by critics and bestselling authors such as Robert Crais, Harlan Coben and Dennis Lehane...
ProfessionNovelist
Date of Birth17 September 1932
CitySpringfield, MA
I rarely write Spenser: For Hire. The ABC series is based on characters created by me, and I serve on the program as a consultant. As we all know, a consultant's first responsibility is to deposit the check every week. After that, I read each script and make suggestions.
It was like a member of the family. We loved the dog. There is nothing wrong on our part.
Their Spenser, Robert Urich, is big, graceful, good-looking and young (a runner-up in the Robert B. Parker look-alike contest).
You have to know what you can do. And you can't castigate yourself for not being able to do what somebody else does.
We think someone gave him some clothes and he's been communicating with some people. We took some things off of him - he still had the blade that he used to escape.
The trend in mergers and acquisitions has been much stronger than we anticipated, and I can't see any factor that will turn it down. This is very positive for stocks.
I don't go to the movies, and I never watch television except ballgames and Law & Order. I can talk along with the reruns now. My lips move with Mike Logan's.
Personally, I'm happy to get a tax cut, ... But when I look at how much the war on terrorism is costing and the other large items out there, like changes to Medicare, I am watching it. Worried is too strong a word, but I am concerned.
On the big issues, Joan and I are amazingly in tune, but on the creature-comfort level, we're incompatible.
I was someplace the other day. Too modest. I was winning the prestigious Hale Award, which is given annually in Newport, New Hampshire for anyone who'll go up and accept it. I don't get that many awards, friends. So it was a three-hour drive?
So it's - the book is the book, the movie is the movie, the money is the money, and - you know?
They needed to do it. If this restructuring is left to year three out of the three-year plan, I think the market is going to be unimpressed.
They have been over the last few years, compared to other competitors like Philips, slow to restructure. Now they're having to bite the bullet.
It's an investment in the community in terms of our tax base and in good-paying jobs for our citizens,