A Detective D.D. Warren Novel
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Thursday night, Sergeant Detective D. D. Warren was out on a date. It wasn’t the worst date she’d ever been on. It wasn’t the best date she’d ever been on. It was, however, the only date she’d been on in quite some time, so unless Chip the accountant turned out to be a total loser, she planned on taking him home for a rigorous session of balance- theledger. So far, they’d made it through half a loaf of bread soaked in olive oil, and half a cow seared medium rare. Chip had managed not to talk about the prime rib bleeding all over her plate or her need to sop up juices with yet another slice of bread. Most men were taken aback by her appetite. They needed to joke uncomfortably about her ability to tuck away plate after plate of food. Then they felt the need to joke even more uncomfortably that, of course, none of it showed on her girlish figure.
Yeah, yeah, she had the appetite of a sumo wrestler but the build of a cover girl. She was nearly forty, for God’s sake, and well aware by now of her freakish metabolism. She certainly didn’t need any soft- middled desk jockey pointing it out. Food was her passion. Mostly because her job with Boston PD’s homicide unit didn’t leave much time for sex. She polished off the prime rib, went to work on the twice- baked potato. Chip was a forensic accountant. They’d been set up by the wife of a friend of a guy in the unit. Yep, it made that much sense to D.D. as well. But here she was, sitting in a coveted booth at the Hilltop Steakhouse, and really, Chip was all right. Little doughy in the middle, little bald on top, but funny. D.D. liked funny. When he smiled, the corners of his deep brown eyes crinkled and that was good enough for her.
She was having meat and potatoes for dinner and, if all went as planned, Chip for dessert.
So, of course, her pager went off.
She scowled, shoved it to the back of her waistband, as if that would make a difference.
“What’s that?” Chip asked, catching the chime.
“Birth control,” she muttered.
Chip blushed to the roots of his receding brown hair, then in the next minute grinned with such self- deprecating power she nearly went weak in the knees.
Better be good, D.D. thought. Better be a fucking massacre, or I’ll be damned if I’m giving up my night.
But then she read the call and was sorry she’d ever thought such a thing.
Chip the funny accountant got a kiss on the cheek.
Then Sergeant Detective D. D. Warren hit the road.
D.D. had been a Boston PD detective for nearly twelve years now.
Excerpted from Live to Tell by Lisa Gardner Copyright © 2010 by Lisa Gardner. Excerpted by permission of Bantam, a division of Random House, Inc. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Lisa Gardner’s new white-knuckle read, Live to Tell, will have you turning pages through the night.
Detective Sergeant D.D. Warren is divorced with no kids, but she doesn’t need to be a parent to feel outrage at a crime scene where a father, after blowing away his wife and kids, took his own life. When the same scenario plays out with another family, D.D. and Alex Wilson, a former detective turned consultant, seek a connection—and find it in Danielle Burton, a 34-year-old psychiatric nurse who had been counseling a severely disturbed child from each family. More significant, though, is the similarity of these crimes to Danielle’s own tragic past, as D.D. and Alex enlist her help to find a killer teetering on the edge of madness….
Lrg Print Hardcover: pages
Publisher: Bantam Books, Inc./ Div Random House ( July 13, 2010 )
Item #: 91-6943
ISBN: 9781616645434
Product Dimensions: 5.5 x 8.25 x 1.66 inches
Product Weight: 29.0 ounces

I like the story line & how Lisa keeps you wanting more however, I don't like the vulgar language. Each book has more than the last. Can't anyone write a good book without all the bad language? I'm sorry to say, I won't be buying another one of her books.
Reviewer: Rosemary O
lisa gardner did it again, wrote a book i could not put down.
Reviewer: mary