Book Review: J.D. Robb’s Holiday in Death
Lieutenant Eve Dallas discovers that a ritualistic serial killer’s victims are traced to New York’s most posh dating service, Personally Yours.
Lieutenant Eve Dallas discovers that a ritualistic serial killer’s victims are traced to New York’s most posh dating service, Personally Yours.
Detective Eve Dallas remembers Julie Dockport all too well, being personally responsible for her incarceration nearly ten years ago. And now, let out on good behavior, she still has nothing but bad intentions. It appears she wants to meet Dallas again — in a reunion neither will forget.
The candlelight, the music, the rose petals strewn across the bed — a seduction meant for his benefit, not hers. He hadn’t intended to kill her. Lieutenant Eve Dallas hasn’t much to go on, but she’ll get him . . .
Full House is romantic suspense with a twist…when Billie Pearce’s predictable life is upended by the highhanded, fascinated Nick, who moves trouble in. They have nothing in common yet each is slowly seduced by the other’s charms.
The former Navy SEALs of Deep Six Salvage thought they could retire and hunt for treasures of the deep, but when a hurricane and thieves come to visit, there’ll be hell to pay.
A cop is found bludgeoned to death, a case of serious overkill that pushes Eve Dallas straight into overdrive. Her investigation uncovers a private vendetta where everyone is judged.
When a famous thespian is killed right before her eyes, New York detective Eve Dallas takes a new place in crime as both officer and witness to murder.
New York cop Eve Dallas faces her most ingenious foe: a “secret admirer” who taunts her with letters…and kills without mercy.
The pursuit of an organ-snatching serial killer leaves Eve Dallas’s job on the line.
A madman with the mind of a genius and the heart of a killer haunts the police with cryptic riddles that are always solved moments too late to save his victims’ lives. All have ties to an ugly ten-year-old secret of Roarke’s, and Lt Eve Dallas will pull out all the stops to solve them . . . and him.