Book Review: J.D. Robb’s “Wonderment in Death”
Someone is hosting dangerous tea parties in 2061 New York…and Eve Dallas must follow an Alice-in-Wonderland path of clues.
Someone is hosting dangerous tea parties in 2061 New York…and Eve Dallas must follow an Alice-in-Wonderland path of clues.
It’s in Bluestem, where everybody knows everybody, a house explodes into flames just as Virgil Flowers is pulling in to investigate a three-week-old murder.
Sir Toby Daye can finally take a breath—friends, allies, a squire to train, and a King of Cats to love. But then war is declared and lives are on the line.
The deaf villagers are losing their sight, unable to mine enough ore, the food deliveries are shrinking, people are starving.
Curran misses the challenge of leading the Pack, so when they offer him a stake in the Mercenary Guild, Curran seizes the chance & so does an ancient enemy.
Forcibly changed, Anna never knew werewolves existed, and she’s learned to keep her head down and never, ever trust dominant males. Now she must hunt a rogue werewolf.
Letty’s friend Skye calls, freaking out about Henry and gets Lucas moving. If he doesn’t, Letty will. A move that has Del, Flowers, Jenkins, and Shrake worried about Lucas’ survival. For Sands is P-I-S-S-E-D.
Olivia Taylor-Jones’ visions continue to haunt; she must find her balance between light and darkness. Now if Olivia can survive her stalker and the fae and pull the truth from her imprisoned mother.
Layton got lucky that night. And unlucky. The smell in that abandoned farmyard led to fifteen bodies and counting.
Local politics, a modest business don’t explain why an entire family is tortured to death. Lucas sees it as scorched-earth retribution from Mexican gangs.