The teen-age daughter of a Captain in the Illegals Division is found murdered in her bed. The Captain asks for Eve Dallas to find the killer. This was a good one. Eve has a psychological profile of the murderer but no pictures. He has managed to bypass a Roarke system, which Roarke is not pleased ...
The MacMasters, home early from their short trip, find their daughter, sixteen-year-old Deena, dead in her bed. She'd been repeatedly raped and sodomized and then strangled. The distraught father, a recently promoted Captain of the NYPSD, requests Lieutenant Eve Dallas to helm the investigation, and...
Two things: These stories tend to end immediately after the case is closed. But sometimes I'd like to know some of the details that happen after the case is closed. Like, did the victim's father go back to work or did he leave the police force after everything settled? It's nothing important, but I'...
[7/8/15]You know a book is good when on the second reading it still keeps you up until 4:00 am. Of course, it's been more than five years since I read it the first time, but it still sucked me in. Sure, as I read, I remembered, but still didn't remember what was coming until almost the end. Some ...
Why are so many of Eve's cases sexual homicides? I've wondered that before, but this case really bothered her. Not that it wouldn't have even without her past, but this one hit her really hard. Not just a sexual homicide, but the victim was the daughter of a cop and very young. Yeah, she's sixteen b...
Another great investigation from Dallas and Roarke. Yes I know she has Peabody, McNab and even Whitney, but for me most of those investigations are purely Eve and Roarke pilling up evidences and making a case out of those scenarios. She can be a little sppoky with the way she always know how the mur...
As usual, JD Robb doesn't let me down. The ongoing relationships are what keep me coming back. The crime in this story was pretty horrific. Sometimes, the mysteries work for me and sometimes they don't. This is one that didn't. While I was interested in how Eve and company worked toward solving the ...
J. D. Robb’s writing pretty much goes against the grain of a lot of what I’ve learned when writing my own stuff, yet I have read every ‘In Death’ novel right up to this one. I must admit, they’d started to get a little predictable. One murder, followed by a second—sometimes a third, maybe more (can...
The workings of the criminal mind that orchestrated the atrocities described in this book are as horrific as the crimes his son carried out. Reading along as Eve closes in and makes the captures is a stomach churning journey as usual, however the ending pages filled with the beauty of her friends we...
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