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U is for Undertow (Kinsey Millhone Mystery)
By Sue Grafton
Publisher:  Berkley
Published:  December 31, 1969
Binding:  Kindle Edition
Pages:  403
We also have these Versions
FormatEdition Published Price New from Used from
Mass Market Paperback  December 31, 1969 - - $5.50" style="text-decoration:underline;">$5.50
Hardcover  December 31, 1969 - $2.49" style="text-decoration:underline;">$2.49 $0.01" style="text-decoration:underline;">$0.01
Paperback  (Lrg Edition) December 6, 2010 - $10.11" style="text-decoration:underline;">$10.11 $6.17" style="text-decoration:underline;">$6.17
Audio CD  (Libraray only ed unabridged Edition) October 1, 2010 - - -
Hardcover  (Large type edition Edition) June 1, 2011 - $124.95" style="text-decoration:underline;">$124.95 -
DVD Audio  (Libraray only ed unabridged Edition) October 1, 2010 - - -
Paperback  - - $8.37" style="text-decoration:underline;">$8.37 $7.11" style="text-decoration:underline;">$7.11
Audio CD  (Unabridged Edition) December 1, 2009 - $18.89" style="text-decoration:underline;">$18.89 $4.66" style="text-decoration:underline;">$4.66
Hardcover  (Large Print Edition) December 31, 1969 - $4.99" style="text-decoration:underline;">$4.99 $0.09" style="text-decoration:underline;">$0.09
Mass Market Paperback  (Reprint Edition) November 30, 2010 - $3.64" style="text-decoration:underline;">$3.64 $0.01" style="text-decoration:underline;">$0.01
Hardcover  December 31, 1969 - $7.26" style="text-decoration:underline;">$7.26 $0.50" style="text-decoration:underline;">$0.50
Audio Cassette  (Libraray only ed unabridged Edition) October 1, 2010 - - -
Paperback  (Export ed Edition) December 4, 2009 - $21.03" style="text-decoration:underline;">$21.03 $1.33" style="text-decoration:underline;">$1.33
Hardcover  (1St Edition Edition) December 1, 2009 - $2.17" style="text-decoration:underline;">$2.17 $0.01" style="text-decoration:underline;">$0.01
Hardcover  (Book Club (BCE/BOMC) Edition) December 31, 1969 - - -
Audio Cassette  (abridged edition Edition) January 1, 2010 - - -
Paperback  August 31, 2010 - $5.64" style="text-decoration:underline;">$5.64 $1.51" style="text-decoration:underline;">$1.51
Audio CD  (Abridged Edition) December 1, 2009 - $17.00" style="text-decoration:underline;">$17.00 $4.99" style="text-decoration:underline;">$4.99
Paperback  December 31, 1969 - $5.36" style="text-decoration:underline;">$5.36 $0.02" style="text-decoration:underline;">$0.02
Hardcover  (Book Club Edition) December 31, 1969 - $75.10" style="text-decoration:underline;">$75.10 $0.18" style="text-decoration:underline;">$0.18
Hardcover  (Lrg Edition) December 1, 2009 - $35.95" style="text-decoration:underline;">$35.95 $0.06" style="text-decoration:underline;">$0.06
 
Product Description:
 
Eyewitness testimony is notoriously unreliable. Even more so when Kinsey Millhone's only lead is a grown man dredging up a repressed childhood memory-of something that may never have happened...

 
 

Robert B. Parker and Sue Grafton: Author One-on-One
In this Amazon exclusive, we brought together blockbuster authors Robert B. Parker and Sue Grafton and asked them to interview each other.

Robert B. Parker?s wise-cracking, street-smart Boston private-eye Spenser earned him a devoted following and wide critical acclaim. Before his death in January 2010, Parker also wrote the bestselling Jesse Stone novels and a new series of Westerns featuring two guns-for-hire, Virgil Cole and Everett Hitch. Read on to see Robert B. Parker's questions for Sue Grafton, or turn the tables to see what Grafton asked Parker.

Robert B. ParkerParker: Tell me about you and Kinsey Millhone and the connection between you.

Grafton: Kinsey Millhone is my alter ego, the woman I might have been had I not married young and had children. She's younger, thinner, and braver than I, but a good companion nonetheless. Since she can know only what I know, I've taken classes in criminal law and self-defense. I've studied police procedure, private eye procedure, toxicology, ballistics, and crime scene investigation. Beyond that, the prime agreement between us is that I don't tell her, she tells me. When readers ask what she?ll be doing after Z is for Zero, I assure them I haven't the faintest idea.

Parker: Describe your writing process (e.g., I get up in the morning, have a martini to get my heart going?).

Grafton: I take a 5.4-mile walk five days a week, so my writing schedule is often dictated by the weather. If it's too hot or too cold, I walk first thing in the morning, come home, shower, dress, and reach my desk at 9:45 or so. I work until lunch, when I take a short break, returning to my desk until mid-to-late afternoon. If I haven't done a morning walk, I walk when my work is done. Then I drink.

Parker
: You've spent time in Hollywood. Tell me about that.

Grafton
: I refer to that period of my life as "doing one to fifteen in Hollywood." I loved it at first, as dazzled as anyone who hasn't figured out yet how treacherous life there can be. As I've said on previous occasions, I learned two things about myself in Hollywood: one, I'm not a team player; and two, I'm not a good sport. The producers I met were well-educated and articulate, and usually offered me a cup of coffee before they set in to savaging my work. I got too old and cranky to put up with that, so I invented Kinsey Millhone as my way out. I liken it to digging my way out of prison with a teaspoon.

Parker
: Do you read reviews? Pay attention to them? Find them helpful? Have an opinion on them?

Grafton
: Where possible, I avoid reviews. The good ones only encourage swell-headedness and the bad ones hurt my feelings or infuriate me. In either case, by the time reviews appear, the book is written and out on the stands. What's a poor girl to do? There's no point in subjecting myself to the reactions of readers and reviewers, since their response is nothing I can control.

Parker
: People sometimes ask me why I write what I write, and I answer, "Because that's what I know how to do." (Then they say, "Would you please stop?" but I'm sure they're just kidding.) Talk about why you write what you write.

Grafton
: I write what I write because when I put in my application for a position at Sears, they never got back to me. I'm still hopeful, especially with the Christmas season coming up. Aside from that, I write what I write because when the work is going well, it makes me happier than just about anything except my kids and grandkids. When the work is not going well . . . which is maybe thirty-five percent of the time . . . I know it's my job to sit patiently and keep at it until I figure out what's wrong. In large part, writing is the only thing I know how to do.


 
 
Eyewitness testimony is notoriously unreliable. Even more so when Kinsey Millhone's only lead is a grown man dredging up a repressed childhood memory-of something that may never have happened...

 
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