Fantasy in Death
Posted on March 7th, 2010
By J.D. Robb
Average customer review: ![]()
Fantasy in Death
In the latest novel from #1 New York Times-bestselling author J.D. Robb, it is game over for the criminals pursued by NYPSD Lieutenant Eve Dallas.
Bart Minnock, founder of the computer-gaming giant U-Play, enters his private playroom, and eagerly can’t wait to lose himself in an imaginary world, to play the role of a sword-wielding warrior king, in his company’s latest top-secret project, Fantastical.
The next morning, he is found in the same locked room, in a pool of blood, his head separated from his body. It is the most puzzling case Eve Dallas has ever faced, and it is not a game. . . .
NYPSD Lieutenant Eve Dallas is having as much trouble figuring out how Bart Minnock was murdered as who did the murdering. The victim’s girlfriend seems sincerely grief-stricken, and his quirky-but-brilliant partners at U-Play appear equally shocked. No one seemed to have a probĀlem with the enthusiastic, high-spirited millionaire. Of course, success can attract jealousy, and gaming, like any business, has its fierce rivalries and dirty tricks-as Eve’s husband, Roarke, one of U- Play’s competitors, knows well. But Minnock was not naive, and quite capable of fighting back in the real world as well as the virtual one.
Eve and her team are about to enter the next level of police work, in a world where fantasy is the ultimate seduction-and the price of defeat is death. . . .
Fantasy in Death
- Published on: 2010-02-23
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Hardcover
- 368 pages
Customer Reviews
The beginning of the end…
This, my fellow Eve and Rourke fans, is the the beginning of the end. Not in a horrible, “OMG, this series has totally gone downhill” but in the slow, beautiful way stories about couples come to a resolution. As Roberts says in the video on this page, people grow and change – Eve has had made amazing personal and emotional leaps from the first In Death novel and Rourke has been right beside her. “Fantasy” shows what happens when that growth starts to pay off. The entire time I was reading “Fantasy in Death”, I felt like I was reuniting with friends I hadn’t seen since their wedding and was now watching them interact as a couple that is deeply and passionately in love. Granted, Roberts sets it up way with a consistent narrative thread around relationships but not once did I feel she was pushing Eve and Rourke as a couple in the reader’s face. Each time it emerged, it made perfect sense and was delightful to read. This is a series about Eve and Rourke and some books have been relationship-lite and cop-heavy. “Fantasy” is the ideal balance. Because it is book 30, the ending scenes gave my heart a bit of a stutter but the resolution only reinforced the consequences of Eve’s growth as a woman and a wife. There is one meta-moment that I read as a shout out to fans (an Eve and Rourke conversation echoes comments that Nora Roberts has made about the end of the series) that made me chuckle and the technology has gone into truly science fiction, reinforcing that this is a series set in 2058. Like any good scifi author, Roberts/Robb has given us enough science to make is plausible and enough fiction to make it cool.
Fans of the series will no doubt read this book because that’s what you do when a new one comes out. If you are new to the series and wondering if this is a good starting point, I say yes. Joining Eve and Rourke and Peabody (who I argue is one of the best written sidekicks in fiction) this far in their relationships will only make the journey from the beginning that much more enjoyable.
As an aside, all authors (romance or not) can learn so much about Roberts/Robb’s skill with dialog. At a pivotal moment, when in the hands of a lesser author, Eve might scream, shout, beat her fist against her breast – she simply said three words and that sentence did more to communicate the depth of growth, emotion, and change in character than would seem possible.
See more details: Fantasy in Death
Relate Links:
US: Buy cheap book online > Fantasy in Death
UK: Bestseller Books & Reviews (UK) > Fantasy in Death
Tags: Beautiful Way, Computer Gaming, Course Success, Death Fantasy, Dirty Tricks, Gaming Giant, Imaginary World, J D Robb, Lieutenant Eve Dallas, Locked Room, New York Times, Playroom, Police Work, Pool Of Blood, Rivalries, Times Bestselling Author, Ultimate Seduction, Virtual One, Warrior King, York Times Bestselling Author
Filed under News and Reviews |
Comments are closed.

