This is a fantastic story Ten Big Ones by Janet Evanovich has everything you could want in a novel. When I just touched the novel for the first time my eyes were stung by the title and the short summary. In short, I thought I would completely despise the book. As I read the book it became more than entertaining with the unsubtle sexual references, swearing and violence. Ten Big Ones, Ten Grand, Ten Thousand Buck is what you could win as a hero at the end of the story. The theme is that gang-related crime will undoubtedly fall. The protagonist of the novel is Stephanie Plum, a resident of Trenton, NJ. She is an unarmed but also non-professional bounty hunter. He is deciding to have lunch at a deli or sub-store, while at the store Plum and his partner cut off the store clerk, see the infamous Red Devil rob a deli and attempt to throw an alcohol bomb. Plum comes around halfway through the book looking for him until she discovers there's a hit on her. The heist isn't for money but for power for the Junkman originally based in Los Angeles but who moved to Trenton to take a place of power in Slayer, one of the city's top two gangs. She: too protective, the boy intermittently does everything possible to support himself. Throughout the book, as Plum hunted the Devil and was hunted too, Stephanie took her grandmother and Lula, the archivist, to get people like Sally, a drag queen, artist, government employee. Sally became a more important character than later realized. He stays to plan his sister's wedding, but he's the hero after managing to make it with his school bus and Uzi killing a large number of Slayers. The New Jersey setting is intricately detailed. Cars are important in the novel and are used throughout the entire novel. Furthermore, almost every car he touched... middle of paper... with his mysterious presence was dangerous. She has or has had a boyfriend, Morelie, with whom she struggles but with whom she stays for love. Janet Evanovich was able to appeal to any age and both genders with clean and explicit comedy. I see life as a jelly donut: it's good until a scoop lands on your best t-shirt. “I drop a lot of jelly drops figuratively and literally.” (Evanovich, 1) It's easy to appreciate his writing; it allows you to fall gracefully into the plot and setting. Although what would have been more than unpleasant would have been the familiar points. They didn't seem real or touching enough. It was unthinkable that a bounty hunter could be important to arrest anyone who goes above the law. While the Ten Big Ones novel is enjoyable for just about anyone, I would only suggest it to those who enjoy drama and adventure. Works Cited Ten Big Ones by Janet Evanovich
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