Overview
Ever been offered a promotion that seems too good to be true? The kind where you snap their arm off to accept, then wonder why all your long-serving colleagues look secretly relieved, as if they're off some strange and unpleasant hook? It's the kind of trick that deeply sinister companies like J.W. Wells & Co. pull all the time. Especially with employees who are too busy mooning over the office intern to think about what they're getting into. And it's why, right about now, Paul Carpenter is wishing he'd paid much less attention to the gorgeous Melze, and rather more to a little bit of job description small-print referring to "pest" control.
Editorials
Michael Dirda
In Your Dreams moves along at a steady clip, but Holt keeps piling on the complications until the novel has clocked in at 474 loose and shambolic pages. Still, it remains an enjoyable diversion, a kind of fantasy equivalent to a chick lit novel, flowing smoothly along, with a gurgle or two on every page for a joke or surprise.β The Washington Post