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Live to Tell: A Detective D. D. Warren Novel

Live to Tell: A Detective D. D. Warren Novel

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Author: Lisa Gardner
Publisher: Bantam
Category: eBooks


This item is no longer available

Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 76 reviews
Sales Rank: 101

Format: Kindle Book
Media: Kindle Edition
Edition: 1
Pages: 400
Number Of Items: 1

Dewey Decimal Number: 813
ASIN: B0036S4D1U

Publication Date: July 8, 2010

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Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com Review
Lisa Gardner Interviews Detective D.D. Warren

Lisa Gardner: D.D.--What do you find most fascinating/frustrating about working with the new guy, crime scene expert Alex Wilson?
D.D.: Alex seems sharp. Knows his blood spatter--I respect that in a guy. ‘Course, he’s been teaching at the Academy, which is one thing, while we’re now standing in a Dorchester home with five dead and carnage in every room. I don’t want lectures, I want results. This was a family--according the neighbors, even a nice family who seemed to actually like one another. Until, of course, the father snapped and killed them all. Or did he? These are the kinds of questions I gotta ask, and Prof Alex better be ready to answer.

LG: When did you know you were going to have your own novel?
D.D.: First time I walked on scene in Alone. Please, I’m five times tougher than fellow detective Bobby Dodge and twenty times smarter. Plus, I look damn good in Jimmy Choos. Let’s see the former sniper do my job in my heels, then we’ll talk.

LG: What's the most difficult case you've ever had to handle? Why?
D.D.: These past two family homicides. For one thing, any crime involving kids wrecks you a little. For another...I don’t believe in coincidence. Here are two families, totally different neighborhoods, socioeconomics, lifestyles, etc., yet they both wind up the same way, dead. Now, what are the odds of two totally different fathers going whacko in exactly the same way? I don’t believe it, but my boss isn’t into gut feel. All comes down to evidence. I would like some. Really, it would be nice right about now. Yo, Alex...

LG: What is the thing you love most about being a Boston P.D. Sergeant?
D.D.: Being in charge, calling all the shots, being the boss. Did I mention being in charge?

LG: What's on your nightstand? What's in the drawer?
D.D.: On my nightstand--back issue of the FBI Law Enforcement Bulletin I keep meaning to read. In the drawer--emergency stash of chocolate, couple of condoms (don’t I wish), and a Kindle loaded up with the latest J.R. Ward steamy hot, seriously action-packed vampire novel. Tell anyone, and they will never find your body.

LG: Favorite food?
D.D.: I’ve always been partial to Italian. Which my squadmate Phil, told Alex all about. Now, Alex claims to be a serious Italian cook--apparently his mother is a Capozzoli and they know their Bolognese. A little wine, a little homemade pasta, a little tiramisu. All I gotta do is pick up the phone, tell him a time and date...one phone call. How hard can that be? One little call.

LG: You drive that butch police car all day. What's your idea of a dream ride?
D.D.: Walking on a beach. No car, no pager, no shoes. Just me, the wind, the waves and the cry of the gulls. I’d probably go nuts within minutes, but it would be nice to give peace a chance.

LG: Can you ever see yourself partnering successfully with another cop? Or are you the quintessential lone wolf?
D.D.: Excuse me, I love my squad and my squad loves me. Neil is one of the finest detectives around, plus better him than me viewing all the autopsies. And Phil--hey, family man, great wife, four kids, works in homicide to escape the violence. Gotta love Phil. They have my back and I have theirs. Life is good.

LG: I'm a woman traveling alone, staying in a hotel. What are your top three tips to keep me safe from psychos?
D.D.: Most hotel crimes have to do with property theft. Unfortunately, a guest walking in on a burglary, or a thief breaking in assuming the room’s vacant only to find a guest present, can lead to violence. Thus, your best defense is to always use the deadbolt, and always advertise when you’re “home,” so to speak.

  1. Bolt all locks anytime you’re in the room and hang out the Do Not Disturb Sign
  2. Double-check door is closed and latched (failures happen more than you think)
  3. Try to avoid staying in rooms closest to the elevators and/or stairs--these rooms are more frequently targeted by thieves as the location allows for quick getaways.

LG: Do you have any scars?
D.D.: Maybe, but you should see the other guy. Give as good as you get, that’s always been my motto.

LG: What's the most you've ever spent on a pair of shoes? Describe!
D.D.: Silver sequined Jimmy Choos, on sale $500. Should never have bought them, but they’re really pretty and when I wear them, I don’t look like a cop, walk like a cop, or think like a cop. How does that commercial go...? Oh yeah, priceless.

LG: If you had to: dog or cat?
D.D.: No! Never! Don’t even think it!

LG: Tell me something I don't know about you.
D.D.: I like mobiles. Don’t ask me why. But there’s something cool about looking up and watching the various shapes and colors slowly twist around. Sometimes, after a really bad day, I go home, close my eyes and create mobiles in my head--maybe one with bright origami animals, or another with silver geometric shapes. I let them go round and round, til finally I can sleep. Then when I wake up, I’ll know something critical about the crime--a piece of the puzzle I missed the day before, a clue I’d overlooked. I think it’s from focusing on patterns. That’s what crimes are, really--very violent patterns that a good detective must deconstruct, then rebuild in her head.

LG: Worst crime scene?
D.D.: The mummified remains of six girls on the grounds of the abandoned mental institute in Mattapan. Never saw anything like it, never want to again. Funny, that was Bobby Dodge’s first case as a detective (Hide)--got him a wife, and now a baby girl. But he never talks about it, and neither do I. Sometimes, finding justice for the victims isn’t enough, but it’s all we got. So a good detective walls it up, puts a Do Not Disturb Sign on that section of memory and walks away. Gotta in this job, or you’ll go mad.

LG: What do you wish you knew five years ago?
D.D.: Can a working woman have it all? Five years ago, I sweated my job. I worried I wasn’t working smart enough, closing cases fast enough. Now, I sweat my entire life. Am I working too hard? Missing out on other parts of life? Maybe I should take Alex up on his offer of homemade alfredo, except can I really be the detective I need to be, while trying to be the girlfriend I’d like to be? Can’t figure it out. So I wish that I’d realized five years ago, how good I had it. That focusing only on my policing career was a luxury I’d never have again. Spoken like a true workaholic, huh?




Product Description
He knows everything about you—including the first place you’ll hide.
 
On a warm summer night in one of Boston’s working-class neighborhoods, an unthinkable crime has been committed: Four members of a family have been brutally murdered. The father—and possible suspect—now lies clinging to life in the ICU. Murder-suicide? Or something worse? Veteran police detective D. D. Warren is certain of only one thing: There’s more to this case than meets the eye.

Danielle Burton is a survivor, a dedicated nurse whose passion is to help children at a locked-down pediatric psych ward. But she remains haunted by a family tragedy that shattered her life nearly twenty-five years ago. The dark anniversary is approaching, and when D. D. Warren and her partner show up at the facility, Danielle immediately realizes: It has started again.

A devoted mother, Victoria Oliver has a hard time remembering what normalcy is like. But she will do anything to ensure that her troubled son has some semblance of a childhood. She will love him no matter what. Nurture him. Keep him safe. Protect him. Even when the threat comes from within her own house. 

In New York Times bestselling author Lisa Gardner’s most compelling work of suspense to date, the lives of these three women unfold and connect in unexpected ways, as sins from the past emerge—and stunning secrets reveal just how tightly blood ties can bind. Sometimes the most devastating crimes are the ones closest to home.
 
 


From the Hardcover edition.



Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 76
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5 out of 5 stars Wonderful can't put it down read   September 10, 2010
atong
Ever since reading The Neighbor, I am completely in awe of Lisa Gardner. This book was so suspenseful and so entrancing that I literally could not stop reading until I finished it all. I haven't been this entrenched since the first time I read Patricia Cornwell's Blowfly. Great great book. I highly recommend it to anyone who enjoys mysteries.


4 out of 5 stars Made me squirm   September 7, 2010
booksforabuck (Dallas)
When Danielle was a child, her father came home drunk and wipes out the entire family, except for Danielle. At least, that is how she remembers it. Now she works as a nurse in a facility for severely disturbed children, and someone is out there murdering families in a way eerily similar to that long-ago crime.

Even worse, the evil has come closer to Danielle. A feral child, recently admitted to the facility, is murdered--or kills herself, it's not clear. And Danielle, because of her past, is suspect #1. This is the mess thrown at Detective D.D. Warren, on the first night she has any chance of getting lucky in a very long time. Also part of the puzzle is a mother trying to protect her own disturbed, homicidal child, who also winds up at the facility.

This is a superb who-dunnit mystery set in a world few of us know, the world of children with severe mental illness. The only reason I did not give this review five stars was because it was so painful to read, at times, a terrible reminder of the horrors that could befall any family. I've read many books dealing with child abuse, rape and sexual abuse, but this one had such a ring of truth about it that it really did make me squirm at times.



4 out of 5 stars Overall, a great book!   September 3, 2010
J. Morris (Morgantown,WV)
I loved the premise and overall plot of this book, but I can only give it 4 stars, b/c I must be dense! I didn't think Gardner explained at all at the end what the killer's reasoning was, and how it all fit together.


2 out of 5 stars Strong background research, lame heroine and plot   September 3, 2010
Concerned mom
The best parts of this book revolve around a children's psychiatric ward, where the portraits of patients and staff and families alike are powerful and moving and feel authentic. Unfortunately, as a murder mystery, this is none of the above. Our heroine, Detective D. D Warren, is a shallow cipher who cares mainly about her next meal (since she's blessed with a "freakish metabolism" that allows her to combine the "appetite of a sumo wrestler [with] the build of a cover girl") and her next boyfriend: "Food was her passion. Mostly because her job with Boston PD's homicide unit didn't leave much time for sex." The pace never falters, but the plotting does, so that the solution to multiple murders relies on the most obvious suspect--so obvious you've been desperately hoping the author has someone else up her sleeve--whose motives don't even make sense.

Unsatisfying, despite the interesting insights into deeply disturbed children.



4 out of 5 stars Kid You Not   August 29, 2010
Ted Feit (Long Beach, NY USA)
Whatever the cause, whether child abuse, a traumatic experience or some other reason, the event can manifest itself in the personality and behavior of a child, or in his or her later life. And various examples are exhibited in this novel, ostensibly a police procedural, but more closely resembling a psychiatric case study. It features hard-boiled, sex-starved D.D. Warren, of the Boston PD, and her team.

The first case to arise is the brutal murder of four members of a family and the apparent suicide of the father. At first blush it appears to be a murder-suicide, but as the investigation progresses it seems there is more to the event. Another similar case follows and a common factor appears to be a pediatric psychiatric unit at a Boston hospital, where disturbed children are treated.

Other characters include Danielle Burton, a conscientious nurse in the unit who 25 years earlier survived a childhood trauma, being the only survivor in a family massacre. The present-day murders take place within days of the anniversary of that event. Then there is Victoria Oliver, a devoted mother of a troubled son who will do anything to protect him.

All the characters interconnect and the past obviously influences the present. Written with zeal and an apparent understanding and sympathy for the underlying theme, the author has not only created an interesting crime story, but also a penetrating look into a vital subject. Highly recommended.


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