Divided in Death Audiobook [Free Download by Trial]

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Divided in Death

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Summary

Reva Ewing, a former member of the Secret Service, a security specialist for Roarke Enterprises, is a prime suspect in a double homicide. She had every reason to want to kill her husband, the renowned artist Blair Bissel. Not only was he having an affair, he was having it with her best friend. But Lieutenant Eve Dallas, who's on the case, believes Reva is innocent. Eve's instincts tell her that the murder scene looks too perfectly staged, the apparent answers too obvious. And when she digs for more, she discovers that at nearly the exact time a kitchen knife was jammed into the victim's ribs, the passcode to his art studio was changed - and all of the data on his computer deliberately corrupted. To Roarke, it's the computer attack that poses the real threat. Signs show that this is the nightmare his company has secretly been preparing for. He and Reva have been under a code-red government contract to develop a program that would shield against a new breed of hackers, the Doomsday Group. These techno-terrorists with brilliant minds and plenty of financial backing hack into systems, steal data, and corrupt computer units on a large scale and kill anyone who gets too close. Eve and Roarke must infiltrate an extraordinarily secretive government agency to expose the corruption at its core, before the virus spreads from one office to a corporation to the entire country.

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4 comments

  • After recently completing Dan Brown's Digital Fortress (DiVinci Code), I couldn't help but draw comparisons between the two authors. I found that a significant portion of the book is dedicated to character conversations rather than progressing the plot. While it was enjoyable, it didn't leave me with that sense of curiosity about what would unfold next.
  • Peabody, Roarke, Feeney... they don't sound "like themselves" as they did in the previous 17 books. Hopefully, it's just a one-time thing! It's pretty discouraging and takes away from the overall experience.
  • The voices of the characters were adjusted a bit, but once you get over that, it's all good. There was a particularly emotional and heartfelt scene between Roarke and Dallas that really hit home.
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