Another high quality outing for Lucas Davenport and co., with a typically well-observed story of an art historian with a taste for more than pictures draped around the framework of upheavals going on in the lead charcters life evident in the previous books in the series. Sandford is almost unique, for me, in the genre by establishing charcters who can wise-crack without sounding too scripted, and who can be attractive and sensual without seeming too irritatingly superhuman. Somehow we still end up caring about our main protagonists, and wanting to spend more time in their company. Smooth and easily digested, the chapters slip past without the fireworks of a Dennis Lehane or George Pelecanos, but its none the less worthwhile a read for that, and the tension is still piled on where appropriate. Heartily recommended, like all the others in the Prey series.