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Strangers in Death (In Death)

by J.D. Robb
Strangers in Death (In Death) by by J.D. Robb
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  • Edition: Mass Market Paperback
  • Publication Date: August 05, 2008
  • Publisher: Berkley
  • ISBN: 0425222896
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: 5022
  • Average Customer Rating: 4.5 stars
  • List price: $7.99
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    Strangers in Death description


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    Product Description:
      #1 NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLING AUTHOR FIRST TIME IN PAPERBACK

    In 2060 New York, Lieutenant Eve Dallas is about to discover how the ties that bind strangers can kill.




    Strangers in Death reviews


    Reviews

    Strangers In Death - 5 stars
    Strangers in Death Review
    Nora Roberts, never let's me down when it come to Eve Dallas. I love how she has let us see her grow into her relationships with Roarke, and the rest of the crew. All I can say if you have not read any of these books go and get them.
    great read - 5 stars
    Strangers in Death Review
    I love this series. This book is exciting, funny, and romantic. It grabs you fast and you just have to hang on until the end. It is strictly an adult book, and a great read.
    As Good as Ever with an Ending to Satisfy - 5 stars
    Strangers in Death Review
    I don't know how many novels about Eve Dallas I've read. I started at the beginning before she met Roarke and have kept going. This one is as satisfying as all the others. The familiar cast of characters is here, each one doing their thing, all still evolving and growing in their roles. In this one, there are two murders: a beloved sporting goods magnet is found dead in bed, apparently the result of kicky sex gone wrong, and a no-good straying husband who seems to have been killed by the woman he picked up in a bar. Wrong! It doesn't take Eve long to suspect a specific person, the one person everyone thinks couldn't possibly be guilty of such a crime, and the way she solves both crimes is great. The climax when she's facing the killer is satisfying because, when it happens, she does exactly what a lot of the readers will probably be wanting to do. Other climaxes are on a more personal level--more interaction between the richest man in the world and his police lieutenant wife. In this one, they have one of their rare arguments--over his money and her lack of it--before the inevitable making-up. Watch out for the scene in Roarke's steamy, heated swimming pool. If the water wasn't hot before Eve slid into it, it certainly is afterward! One of the things I particularly like about these books are the exchanges between Eve and Peabody, and Eve and Roarke--and the obvious love these two characters--who have both had hard lives and are still to a certain extent picking their way through their relationship. This book is up the same high standards as the other novels and is one I recommend.
    A little predictable, but Eve still rocks! - 4 stars
    Strangers in Death Review
    I didn't like the title for this installment of "In death" because it practically gave away the plot. This is one of Robb's most predictable mysteries, at least for anyone who is familiar with the Hitchcock film that inspired it. Thankfully, the real fun is in watching Eve zero in on the killer and figure out how the crime was committed despite flawless alibis. Plus, Robb makes sure to mention the movie directly in the book, almost like a wink to the reader! The story reminded me of one of those infrequent episodes of "Law and Order" where they show the villain commit the crime at the beginning. Viewers know who it is, but the police still have to work it out. It's not quite as satisfying as figuring it out along with them, but good none-the-less. Eve's still the cop I wish every city had protecting it.

    Robb's mysteries can be fantastic and intricate, or fairly simple. Sometimes readers can figure them out in a few chapters (as I did here), or be held until the very end. But, her real gift is characterization. She creates wonderful characters readers like and can identify with. Even after twentysome installments, I'm still in love with Roarke, Eve, Peabody and the rest of the crew. They all have real depth-- their dialog and interaction make them come alive. I couldn't put this book down, and I'm sure fans of the series will not be disappointed. There is a lot of humor (where appropriate) to temper the murder mystery, but justice remains the focus. All the major characters make an appearance, if only briefly, but the major action is centered on Eve and Roarke. I've noticed in the last few books, Roarke has taken a more direct role in the investigation and we see more of him and Eve talking through the case. Peabody was pushed a little more into the background. This is fine for a few books, but I hope that she isn't relegated to minor character status like Feeney. Her repartee with Eve is just too good.

    Overall, this isn't the best of the series but it's still a solid, very enjoyable mystery. The satisfaction of Eve getting the bad guy has not lessened one bit through all these novels, and I can't wait for more.

    A Hitchcockian feel not everyone will like. - 4 stars
    Strangers in Death Review
    When Eve is called to a homicide on Park Avenue, she finds herself in the bedroom of Thomas Anders, sports fanatic and the head of Anders Worldwide. Sixty-one, he, like his father before him, ran a top enterprise of sporting-goods turned into more; several cities set up to help underprivileged children with sporting-goods to play sports. Unfortunately, Anders's life was cut short. His body was found by his House Manager (housekeeper); each arm and leg tied to either the headboard or footboard with velvet cord, and a velvet cord around his neck. Upon first glance, looks like a lover's tryst gone wrong. But that doesn't sit well with Eve - and her gut instinct was correct. Everything was too clean, made too easy, and once confimed that he'd been drugged, Eve is on the hunt for a killer.

    After meeting the characters involved in Anders's life, Eve believes in her gut that the wife, Ava Anders, did the deed. But how could she? She was off in the tropics with her two best friends on an girls-only holiday. But something about Ava sets Eve off. Too pristine, in every way; from attire to manner to emotion. However, proving it is Eve's challenge. And Eve enjoys a challenge.

    Along the way, the more the facts fit together, the more and more they point away from Ava, but Eve refuses to let go. She knows Ava is in up to her pretty little head, and she'll be damned if Ava gets away with it. Baxter, on the sidelines, asks Eve to take a look at a case a couple of months old that he and Trueheart have been working on. They can't close it, the trail's gone cold, and they're hoping a fresh set of eyes can help in closing the case. But upon another glance, Eve catches something that wouldn't have caught anyone's eye: the wife of the victim in Baxter's case is loosely connected to Ava, through Anders's charity of sporting-goods. No all Eve needs is a confession to wrap it up.

    I'll admit, I am a huge fan of Nora Roberts (I have everything she's ever written), but my ultimate fave is her J.D. Robb series. And while I've been a faithful fan since I stumbled upon this series back in 2003, I didn't find this one as thrilling as the rest. Although different, I thought it was good just the same. Just not 5-star good.

    Eve is called to the homicide of Thomas Anders. But something ring's false to her - everything seems staged somehow. Meeting up with Morris, the ME, over Anders's body, one thing stands out. Anders had been drugged. And even though he was strangled, it was still a slow death. Something's wrong, and Eve plans on figuring out what it is. Question is: How? The wife was in the tropics, sharing a huge suite with her two friends. There are witnesses. The nephew has an airtight alibi. Was it murder for hire? Eve doesn't think so, and after going through their financials, there is no evidence of a payoff.

    The more Eve investigates, the more her gut points her toward the wife. But there's nothing to support it. So Eve digs and digs and digs until she finds something, with the usual cast of characters: Roarke, Peabody, McNab, Feeney, Baxter and Trueheart.

    Now, usually, there are several suspects and it takes the entire book to figure out who it is, if you can figure it out. But Eve is so sure that it was Ava, directly or indirectly, that the story pretty much stayed focused on Ava, the wife. It was different from the norm, and I can't say I liked it overmuch. It was like putting a stereotype on the rich - something that Eve is intimate with as she is married to a billionaire. The greed key has been played so often that I was hoping for something more.

    The way the case came together was different. A twist I wasn't expecting. I figured for sure a hired hit. Far from it. The more I got into the story, the more it had a sort of Hitchcockian feeling to it. Now, anyone who's watched a Hitchcock movie will understand when they read this book.

    What was disturbing was how a woman can play a roll such as Ava did, to rise herself to the top, to get everything she wanted, all for the sake of "because I deserve it." How she tested the waters with `potential candidates' to help her with her crime, the questions, the manipulation, reduced to threatening kids - the kids and the mothers that she's supposed to be helping, caring for.

    Wasn't any action in this one at all. More running around, thinking and tying things together than anything. It didn't have the feel for what I'm used to, and I wasn't thrilled. Yes, I liked how Eve played her hand, how she slipped Ava up, but it was from point A to point B that wasn't thrilling.

    I must, however, comment on the fight that Eve and Roarke had. I have yet to hear of a couple, married, common-law, or even roommates, not having argued about money. While most arguments are based on the money spent, over-spending, etc..., their argument was the opposite: Eve had spent the money from her paycheck but didn't even thing to ask Roarke for some, even knowing that she had an account in her name that Roarke set up simply for her to use. But to her, it's his money, and she didn't marry him for his money. She can't just take it, it doesn't feel right to her. The money he has is because he earned it, legally or not. And while each of them has a hard time understanding why the other is being so pig-headed about it, they finally get it, and it becomes a compromize between two people who love each other, regardless of their financial situation. That was a part of the book I adored. Every time Eve and Roarke get into a personal argument, they seem more and more like real life people than characters in a book, like a truly happily married couple, going through what just about every married couple goes through. I can give top marks for that!

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