The Literary Shed.
  • about
    • charity
    • contact us & privacy policy
    • news from the literary lounge
    • nitty gritty
    • thank you, links & ©
    • sheds
  • read
    • editor’s choice
    • the literary lounge
      • articles
      • fiction
        • Midnight in a perfect world
      • interviews / Q&A’s
      • reviews
    • the literary cat
      • ‘Django Reinhardt – Last Cat Standing’
      • articles
      • image of the month
    • the literary landscape
      • articles
      • image of the month
      • the literary garden
    • authors
    • the literary cook
      • articles
      • recipes
    • the literary traveller
      • articles
      • places to visit
      • reading on location
    • top lists
    • word of the day
  • see
    • editor’s choice
    • book covers we love
    • interviews / Q&A’s
    • original film
    • music
  • hear
    • editor’s choice
    • interviews
    • music
    • poetry & plays
    • readings
    • speeches
  • ……..
  • words
  • library of scents
  • contact

Connections in Death

You are here: Home » Archives for Connections in Death »

Making connections, JD Robb’s Eve Dallas

Posted by Aruna at July 6, 2019 in editor's choice &reviews &the literary lounge

0 Comments

  We’re huge fans of JD Robb’s Eve Dallas–Roarke futuristic crime series, especially as they just get better over time. Connections in Death builds on Dallas’ ever-growing family, seeing familiar and beloved characters go through extremely challenging and bloody times only to rise stronger than before. As always, Robb creates a fast-paced, detailed and carefully … Continue readings →

Tags : Connections in Death, Dallas–Roarke, dystopian crime fiction, Eve Dallas, Eve Dallas thriller, In Death series, JD Robb, Nora Roberts, Peabody, Roarke, women in crime fiction

recent articles

  • Enough – challenging our food choices
  • Paolo Maurensig’s Game of the Gods
  • The Stone Diaries, an Old Familiar
  • Simon Kernick’s Kill a Stranger
  • Ari Thór Arason’s swansong
  • Haunted Magpie, murder–mayhem on Mallorja
  • Baghdad Central, when books are better than TV
  • A joy for curious minds, Lev Parikian’s new book
  • Roxanne Bouchard’s excellent The Coral Bride
  • Nikita Gill’s extraordinary vision
  • Michael Connelly’s epic hero, Mickey Haller
  • Visiting the Mersey Estuary
  • Ambridge at 70: Catherine Miller’s The Archers
  • A Nordic Gothic tale, The Nesting
  • Anita Nair’s Bangalore detective, Borei Gowda

© 2017 The Literary Shed. All rights reserved.
Designed by Quinwebsolutions