New York homicide cop Eve Dallas is plunged into a terrifying nightmare, where her past and the present are about to collide.
Eve Dallas was just a rookie cop when her instincts led her to the apartment of Isaac McQueen, a murderer and paedophile, who was keeping young girls in cages.
Now a homicide Lieutenant, Eve is one of the most distinguished officers in the city - and then she learns that McQueen has escaped from jail.
Bent on revenge against Eve and with a need to punish more 'bad girls' McQueen heads to Dallas, Texas - the place where Eve was found as a child, the place where she killed her own abusive monster when she was only eight-years-old.
With Eve and her husband Roarke in pursuit of McQueen, everything is on the line and secrets from the past are about to be explosively revealed.
- ISBN10 0749955864
- ISBN13 9780749955861
- Publish Date 15 March 2012 (first published 1 September 2011)
- Publish Status Active
- Publish Country GB
- Publisher Little, Brown Book Group
- Imprint Piatkus Books
- Format Paperback (B-Format (198x129 mm))
- Pages 496
- Language English
Reviews
EBookObsessed
If you have never read any of the In Death stories, let me tell you that Lt. Eve Dallas is one of those amazing, unforgettable characters. You don’t need to have read the whole series to read this story. But I warn you, you will need to clear your calendar because you will want to start this series from the beginning, and this was book #33.
Now for those of us who have read ALL the In Death stories, we know that Eve, with the help and love of Roarke, has been recovering from her abusive and tragic childhood. This case is going to dredge up a lot of those childhood nightmares which Eve has just begun to work past. Because so much of the horror of Eve’s past is relived in this book through her nightmares and with reviewing the original case arrest of McQueen, it is a relatively darker and more emotionally draining story. And yes, admittedly, stories about a murder cop don’t usually generate happy stories. Some of the stories have been more violent than others, and some of the stories delve more into the technology of the future; and still others seem less about the murder and more about the development of the relationships between the main characters. This one, I feel, is one of the darker stories of the series.
New York to Dallas is well written, intriguing and definitely worth reading, although I missed Peabody, Feeney and McNab as much as Dallas does this time around.