OK, this is hands down my favourite book in the Evidence Universe so far.
Partly that's because I'm a complete sucker for the 'ubercompetent good guy who's being forced to do bad things' trope, and partly it's because ever since I first met Dmitri in Catalyst, I've been hoping - but not expecting - that he'd get his own book.
So as soon as his identity was revealed, I literally squeed out loud.
Also, I loved Ivy as a female lead. Like almost all of Ms Grant's heroines (yeah, I'm still a tad ambivalent about Cressida two books on), she's smart, sensible, competent and good at what she does without coming off as a Mary Sue. She also knows the limits of her expertise though, which is something I'll always respect in a character.
And I find it interesting that despite Dmitri doing a lot of the same things Ian did in Book 5 in terms of automatically noting details that could later be psychologically used against someone, it didn't rub me the wrong way the way it did with Ian. Maybe because Dmitri noticed them, but never actively used them to manipulate Ivy, where Ian just charged in there and messed with Cressida's mind because it was the easiest way to get what he wanted (the which, apparently, I still haven't forgiven him for)
Plus, I'm giving the book bonus points for a/ skillfully handled 'morally grey' scenes, and b/ some of the best dirty talk I've encountered in the series so far.
Another thing I've been enjoying as Evidence the series has progressed is how characters - and the ever-growing *team* - from previous books keep showing up in them. I've discovered that the trope of 'lone hero/ine' just doesn't do it for me. I like seeing how the main characters interact with their friends/colleagues/teammates. I like watching the main characters supporting and being supported by B characters - especially if they're B characters I already know. I like getting to watch a team in action, with each person's individual talents contributing to a 'greater than the sum of the parts' vibe
Really, my only criticism of the book is that I'm not sure how I feel about the big reveal of who's been pulling Dmitri's strings the whole way along. I won't say I was expecting it, but it didn't feel particularly shocking or surprising either.
Also, as I mentioned at the ~63% mark - if I could have one Xmas present, it would be seeing Toni Anderson's Alex Parker and Dmitri sitting down to a bonding conversation over their shared assassin pasts, and the inevitable psych issues that they both HAVE to be dealing with as a result.
(And I'm kind of hesitant to start on Book 8 now, because I know it's the last one in the series - at least so far - which means THERE'S NOTHING LEFT TO READ AFTER IT. If I don't start it, then there's still something to look forward to. And yes, I get exactly the same way about watching the final season finale in any TV series I really love too.)