by
J. D. Robb
ISBN: 0-425-15098-4 Order from: Amazon.com
A tense police thriller with an appealing, intelligent heroine, good on human emotion and interaction, but set in a fake-seeming world and with a rather overpowering romantic interest.
Reviewed by David on June 05, 1999
Genre: Mystery (Near Future, Romance, Police Procedural)
Synopsis: Sixty years in the future, many drugs have been legalized, prostitution has become a licensed profession, and androids help guard buildings and tend bars. Nevertheless, poverty, greed and jealousy remain. After ten years on the force, Lieutenant Eve Dalls has become one of the most effective homocide investigators in the New York police. Her combination of intelligence and compassion, dedication and passion for justice drive her to treat each case as the most important thing in her life.
While Eve starts investigating a series of murders of women in the New York of 2058, she is uneasily coping with her growing, sometimes stormy relationship with Roarke, a self-made magnate.
Full Review: Nora Roberts, a well-known romance writer, has written this series of near-future police procedurals with a romantic bent. Her protagonist, Eve Dallas, has the combination of courage, intelligence and humor that make for a very appealing hero. A small set of supporting characters that make their continuous appearance in the books of this series flesh out her life and investigations.
Eve has to sort out a set of suspects, not without making some temporary mistakes. Worst of all is her knoweldge that more victims will fall to the killer's knife with every delay in the investigation. Once again, Eve's lover comes close to being a suspect, and her conflict is excacerbated by her discomfort in his world of luxury, fashion and power.
The world of the near future is rather flawed for a science fiction reader. The tropes: annoying androids, space flight, cranky computers, are full of inconsistencies and seem to be more appropriate to sitcoms than to fiction. For instance, there is some confusion between orbital and interstellar flight, AI and glorified PCs. In general, the setting is used to add artificial glitter and remove the grit and constraints of a real city police investigation rather than to add narrative value.
This setting, artificial as it is, does allow for a more streamlined plot. While most of the characters are well portrayed, Roarke, the eccentric and slightly shady billionaire is improbably well-equipped as a romantic hero: movie-star handsome, rich, strong, able to design or crack any electronic system, excellent at unarmed combat and burglary, perceptive and possessed of remarkable indurance (in bed or out).
In summary, this is a fast-moving, entertaining novel with an appealing hero, offering a good emotional ride but little food for thought. The fans of Eve Dallas may also like Hamilton's Anita Blake.
Overall: 6; Plot: 4.5; Characters: 6; Style: 5.5; World-building: 5; Originality: 6;
Copyright date 1995, Berkley Publishing Group (Berkley), December 1995, Mass market paperback, 296 pages
ISBN: 0-425-15098-4 Order from: Amazon.com