| Description:
 
 Dana Evans, who made her first appearance in Sidney Sheldon's The Best Laid Plans, is a  spunky, good-looking, young Washington TV journalist who's recently returned to  the nation's capital from the Balkans, where she adopted a handicapped war  orphan who's having trouble adjusting to life in America. But that doesn't keep  Dana from following a story all over the world, from Washington to Aspen, Nice,  Juneau, Dusseldorf, Rome, Brussels, Moscow, and Siberia. Each of these brief  visits is like a postcard--a local landmark or two, an interesting local  restaurant (at least in the European venues), and another piece of the puzzle,  which has to do with why every member of a venerable, old Washington dynasty has  died a violent death in the last year. It seems strange that in a media-savvy  city like Washington, no one but Dana has noticed there's a pattern in the rapid  extinction of the Winthrops or even whispered the words family vendetta.  But that's why pretty, young girl TV reporters were invented, at least by  Sheldon.
   As Dana sets out to investigate the distinguished career of the Winthrop family  patriarch, her lover Jeff, a sports anchor at her station, is called away to  administer aid and succor to his former wife, a beautiful model who's realized,  too little and too late, that she never should have dumped him. And Kemal, the  12-year-old orphan, is being drugged by his baby sitter, who's in cahoots with  at least one set of bad guys. Dana hasn't noticed how tractable the  temperamental boy has become recently because she's been dressing up like a two-bit Russian tramp to infiltrate a secret weapons base in Siberia... Do you hear  the words movie locations? But all's well that ends well, as it usually  does for Sheldon's heroines, and in the meantime you've learned where the five-star hotels are and what to order in a famous restaurant in Rome. A slick,  commercial, slightly thin tale told by a craftsman of the genre. --Jane  Adams
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