Ceremony in Death

Unabridged
Author: J.D. Robb
Narrator: Susan Ericksen
Genres: Mystery, Thriller, Women Detectives, Police Stories
Publisher: Brilliance Audio
Date: October 2006
Length: 10 hours
Ratings:
Formats:
  • CD

Overview

Conducting a top secret investigation into the death of a fellow police officer has Lieutenant Eve Dallas treading on dangerous ground. She must put professional ethics before personal loyalties. But when a dead body is placed outside her home, Eve takes the warning personally. With her husband, Roarke, watching her every move, Eve is drawn into the most dangerous case of her career. Every step she takes makes her question her own sense of right and wrong - and brings her closer to a confrontation with humanity's most seductive form of evil...

Reviews (7)

ceremony in death

Written by Deborah Dinehart on May 3rd, 2008

  • Book Rating: 5/5

this was an excellent example of ms robbs writing i really enjoyed it

Ceremony In Death

Written by Laura Jordan on February 27th, 2008

  • Book Rating: 2/5

I did not care for this book. I thought the narrator was acting a little too much. Story seemed too fictious at times. Did not hold my attention.

Ceremony in Death

Written by Anonymous on January 16th, 2008

  • Book Rating: 4/5

Great story-teller. This series never fails to deliver.

Ceremony in Death

Written by Angela Jones on January 5th, 2008

  • Book Rating: 4/5

Another good book. I am addicted to the series and as the other reader stated it is more sex then necessary and I find myself fast forwarding over that part. It is not essential to the story line.

Ceremony in Death

Written by Jean from Santa Cruz, CA on November 5th, 2007

  • Book Rating: 4/5

Another reviewer mentioned that this series is addictive. I must say I agree with that. When you finish one story you can hardly wait to start another. A bit more sex than I am comfortable with but otherwise is a great story. Always keeps you guessing the outcome.

A bit eerie

Written by Anonymous from Houston, TX on October 31st, 2007

  • Book Rating: 4/5

I liked the book a lot but have to say that the bad-guys gave me the creeps.

Ceremony in Death

Written by Anonymous on August 19th, 2007

  • Book Rating: 2/5

This book emphasized the macabre on witch-craft so much that it took away from a good detective novel which it was represented as being.

Author Details

Author Details

Robb, J.D.

Creation in Death, published by GP Putnam in November 2007, is the 25th book in the futuristic police procedural series about a Lieutenant Eve Dallas of the New York Police and Security Department. What started in 1995 as a three-book experiment by a then unknown author named J.D. Robb is now a series that keeps readers waiting with bated breath for each installment.


More than a decade ago it wasn’t public knowledge that the genius behind J.D. Robb was best-selling author Nora Roberts, but readers were immediately taken with Eve Dallas’ integrity, strength and heart and her burgeoning relationship with the mysterious Roarke.


The Gothic Journal hailed Robb’s work as “a unique blend of hard-core police drama, science fiction and passionate romance” while The Paperback Forum called it “a fantastic new detective series.”


Since then, 18 of the 25 J.D. Robb titles have landed on the New York Times Bestseller List. And Innocent in Death, the February 2007 release, hit the bestseller list in the number 1 spot.


J.D. Robb was a product of numbers: by 1995, there was a surplus of Nora Roberts’ titles to be released by her publishers and she continued to create more. Reluctant to publish romantic suspense books similar to what she was already writing under a pseudonym, Nora had been playing with the idea of a strong, idealistic woman on the NY police force in the future. J.D. Robb was born. The initials were taken from Ms. Roberts’ sons, Jason and Dan, while Robb was a shortened form of Roberts.


She wrote a three-book arc that had Eve Dallas solving three different murders, but winding its way through all three was the continuing thread of her relationship with the mysterious billionaire Roarke that started in the first book when he was a suspect in a high-profile case.


Looking back from the vantage point of the release of the 25th book in the series, Nora commented, “I think we saw solid potential with the release of the first book. Enough, at least, for everyone to say: Okay, let's do three more.”

She continued, “For me, the emotional investment clicked during the first draft of the first book. I really fell for the characters, and hoped the readers would respond to them so I could keep writing the series.”


A series with a continuing, and growing, cast of characters gave Nora the chance to explore the people she created and peel the layers off book by book. Eve and Roarke were about to get married at the end of that initial three-book arc and are on their honeymoon as the fourth book opens. This afforded Roberts the chance to explore a marriage through the subsequent 19 books to the delight – and despair of some readers.


Those readers have been vocal about their desire to see the couple have a baby or for Eve to become a captain in the department. A baby, explains Nora Roberts would change the way Eve does her job – which is physical and emotional to the point of exhaustion. The answer to that frequently asked question is that a baby would mean the end of the series. As for a captaincy, it’s always possible.


Besides the exploration of the marital state, the cast of characters has grown as Eve, very much a loner in Naked in Death, has opened up her circle to include a partner, her fellow officers and a domineering butler who came along with Roarke. Again, readers have become addicted to seeing what’s going on in the secondary characters’ lives and when there isn’t enough of a particular favorite, they love to ask “Why not?”


“It's the story – it’s always about the story,” explained Nora. “It's gratifying when readers fall for secondary characters and want more. Sometimes there is more--and sometimes there just isn't. If a character has a recurring role, then he or she will pop up--as a cameo or in a more active role--when the story calls for it.”


It wasn’t until the 12th book in the series, Betrayal in Death, that the publisher fully acknowledged that J.D. Robb is indeed Nora Roberts. In the fall of 2003, the two parts of the Nora Roberts whole joined together to write Remember When. The first half was a Roberts’ romantic suspense set in the present, the second half was a Robb In Death that saw Eve picking up a thread that relates to the first part of the book.
Each In Death book now carries the banner: Nora Roberts writing as JD Robb. What started as an experiment is now firmly a part of the Nora Roberts phenomenon.