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Unabridged CDs - 9 CDs, 11 hours
From America's #1 bestselling crime writer comes the extraordinary new Dr. Kay Scarpetta novel.
Bestseller Cornwell's 15th novel to feature Dr. Kay Scarpetta (after 2005's Predator) delivers her trademark grisly crime scenes, but lacks the coherence and emotional resonance of earlier books. Soon after relocating to Charleston, S.C., to launch a private forensics lab, Scarpetta is asked to consult on the murder of U.S. tennis star Drew Martin, whose mutilated body was found in Rome. Contradictory evidence leaves Scarpetta, the Italian carabinieri and Scarpetta's lover, forensic psychologist Benton Wesley, stumped. But when she discovers unsettling connections between Martin's murder, the body of an unidentified South Carolina boy and her old nemesis, the maniacal psychiatrist Dr. Marilyn Self, Scarpetta encounters a killer as deadly as any she's ever faced. With her recent switch from first- to third-person narration, Cornwell loses what once made her series so compelling: a window into the mind of a strong, intelligent woman holding her own in a profession dominated by men. Here, the abrupt shifts in point of view slow the momentum, and the reader flounders in excessive forensic minutiae. (Oct.)
Copyright 2007 Reed Business InformationThis 15th book in the Kay Scarpetta series focuses more on the relationships of the familiar characters than the mystery. Nemesis Dr. Marilyn Self is back to plague Kay as her new private forensic pathology practice tries to find the links among murders in Italy and Charleston, SC. There are many other hurdles and some surprises along with some inevitabilities. The new locale and a cliffhanger ending show the series is still worth following. Narrator Kate Reading is as familiar to Scarpetta fans as the characters are. Recommended. [Cornwell's Postmortem is the only novel to win the Edgar, Creasey, Anthony, and Macavity awards in a single year; Book of the Dead is also available as downloadable audio from
—Joyce Kessel
cindyg
Posted October 15, 2008
I was saddened by the problems Marino and Dr Scarpetta ran into. I feel like they should have ended up together, Marino has been there for the Dr and it seems in the storys as shes more snotty or to good for him and it makes it harder for me to like her as a character.
2 out of 2 people found this review helpful.
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Posted June 14, 2008
I think Patricia Cornwell needs to go back and re-read her first book. I used to love her books. She was kind to Martino even though he drove her nuts and she loved her niece. She loved cooking for them. I miss the life they used to share.
2 out of 3 people found this review helpful.
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Posted April 30, 2008
I have read all Cornwell's Scarpetta novels and with each one I found myself liking the books less and less. Now I quit! I don't think I can endure Cornwell's writing or the character,Kay Scarpetta. Scarpetta, with each novel, becomes more and more self-centered and arrogant. It is apparent in each novel that she thinks she is better than everyone else. She constantly puts Pete down because of his lack of education, his grammer, and his appearance. (When he does lose weight, it is weeks before she even mentions noticing it to him.) Eventually, the only character I was left liking was Pete, and with this novel she even makes him unlikable. As I read 'Book of the Dead,' I felt like I was reading a first draft because each chapter began with an incomplete sentence stating the location and time. There were many, many places in the book where Cromwell did this. She also kept repeating, word for word, from previous chapters and from her previous books as though she didn't have enough new material for this book, or just didn't care enough to come up with something new. I usually read her books in one or two days, but this one took me almost two weeks to finish. I started reading and became angry with the characters. The story was confusing and I got bored with. I would put the book away for a while, soometimes even days, then would try reading it again. I kept doing this for the duration of the book. When I finally finished it, I felt drained. I have never liked the abrupt endings to her books, and this one didn't stray from that. It seems like even Cornwell gets bored and just wants the story to end so she rushes through to get it over with.
2 out of 2 people found this review helpful.
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Posted February 21, 2010
We have read alot of her books but this is the last one, It was so bad that we could not finnish it.And have gotten rid of it. We will never buy another.
1 out of 2 people found this review helpful.
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Posted October 19, 2009
Poorly conceived and executed. The author, usually one of my favorites, had a really bad book.
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
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Posted October 4, 2009
I used to really like the characters, but in this book, everything seemed to fall apart. The characters, plot, setting, everything about this book seemed contrived. The plot was outlandish and the author couldn't seem to hold it all together. I was very disappointed!! I'm glad I bought the book on clearance and didn't spend a lot of money on it!
1 out of 2 people found this review helpful.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.All this book offered was thousands of dull, boring conversations. Very little action and I could have cared less about the characters. The relationship (?) between Benton and Kay was dull. The off the wall Lucy was not even remotely likable. She's a spoiled brat. Marino went nutso and nobody really cared...including this reader. And Dr. Self was a self-inflicted bore. I am just sorry I spent so much time trying to get something out of this awful book.
1 out of 2 people found this review helpful.
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Posted July 6, 2009
Kept hoping Cornwell would return to her earlier good reads. Was a fan for years. But Wesley's a Wuss...Lucy's nuts...and Kay's turned to jelly. I'm like Marino....I'm outa here!
1 out of 3 people found this review helpful.
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Posted July 4, 2009
i've read her book of jack the ripper and was impressed with her writing style. i had high hopes for this book as i love a good psychologicla thriller. boy, was i wrong. the prologue grabs you, but then the rest of the book just dddrrrrrrraaaaaggggsss. there are characters introduced but for aboslutely no reason i can figure out, and the entire thing seems to be written so she can show off her understanding of the process behind forensic science. i wish she had focused more on the serial murders and the reason for them instead of building the characters then not taking them anywhere. i don't think i'll read any of her books again. honestly, i'm surprised it made the new york times bestseller list.
1 out of 2 people found this review helpful.
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Posted January 7, 2009
I used to love reading these books early in this series when Kay Scarpetta solved murders using forensic science. I gave them up when they became more about the disfunctional charaters in Kay's life than solving murders. I had not read one in a few years so I thought I would give them another try. Big mistake! This book is more wierd psychology than forensic investigation. All of the same charaters are still around and more messed up than ever. I won't try again.
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
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Posted September 18, 2008
This novel was definitely not the best Cornwell has ever written. The blatant airing of her political point-of-view about Bush and the war was unnecessary and distracting. People who say she needs to reread her first Scarpetta novels are right on. I used to love all these characters and I found that I had no sympathy toward any of them, except possibly Marino. The relationships between all the main characters has become so disfunctional it takes away from the story and you can't help thinking they would be better off apart from each other as opposed to working as the team they are supposed to be. Kay used to be someone who was looked up to, a wiser women who was both intelligent and warm. Now she comes off as distant and a bit out of touch. I will continue to read PC's books, but am disappointed.
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
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Posted September 5, 2008
I have read every book in the Kay Scarpetta series. I fell in love with the characters on the first read....and grew to love them more with each book.....loved their vulnerabilty, their weakness, strengths, and demons. They each had such power and depth as individuals. This book is so disjointed and so technical...I'm a crime buff...but it seems more about the technology than the characters....and nothing feels connected. I don't feel like I'm reading about the characters I know. I'm 3/4 of the way through...and I will finish it....but the only person who's feeling I understand are Marinos. Lucy and Kay are closed up....and Benton.....have long wondered what he is about.....and this book makes it worse...are we supposed to dislike him? Love your writing...and I'm always waiting at the bookstore for your next book...think now I'll wait for some reviews.
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
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Posted January 17, 2008
I first want to say that I had a hard time staying awake to read this one. I had to reread several pages over and over, and it took a long time to make it through. I love Pete Marino, and I HATED what she did to his character.I have read everthing this woman has written but my question is who wrote this book? I started Double Cross by Patterson, and finished it in a week.This book delivers.
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
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Posted January 12, 2008
I was a huge Cornwell fan for years, but her last four or five books have been disappointing. Her characters, especially Kay Scarpetta, have become caricatures, and not particularly likeable ones. Marino is the only likeable regular character in the series at this point. No one ever seems really dead, and the situations become more and more unreal. Cornwell needs to go back to where she was when she began this series to save it.
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
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Posted November 18, 2007
You go Patricia, this is a great book! All my friends love it and they are buying it for their family members for Christmas. We just can't wait to see what Dr. Kay has going next. We like Lucy too, she is something else. What a wonderful writer you are. All we can say is you go Girl keep up the great work. I think what makes you such a good writer is that you live in the world you write about.
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Dr. Kay Scarpetta and her long time lover Benton Wesley are called to Rome to work with a team investigating the death of sixteen-year-old tennis star Drew Martin. Her body was left in a prominent location so that her mutilated corpse would be found quickly huge chunks were cut out of her body and her eyes are gouged out and sand was placed in them before they were glued shut. The killer who will come to be known as the Sandman thinks he is doing the victim a favor by putting her out of her misery. Before they fly home Benton gives Scarpetta a ring and then she returns home to South Carolina where she has opened up her own pathology practice Coastal Forensic Pathology Associates. ---- The Sandman is also in Charlotte where he is scoping out his next victim a woman who, like Drew, also appeared on Dr. Marilyn Self¿s talk show. Dr. Self has volunteered to be a patient in Benton¿s study coordinated at McLean University in Massachusetts because the Sandman is e-mailing her pictures of his handiwork. Kay is involved in the case and is also trying to deal with the fact that someone is trying to run her out of town, Marino¿s angry moods, Lucy¿s snooping into her personal life and a nosy neighbor who likes to make trouble for her. ---- Patricia Cornwell always writes crime thrillers that are fantastic but BOOK OF THE DEAD, though superb, is a bit of a departure for her. The author concentrates more on the relationship between Kay and those she cares about and their feelings some revelations are revealed as well as a shocking act that nobody who knows those characters could ever see coming. The cast comes alive in a way they have never done before and readers will feel connected to them in a way they have never done before. Ms. Cornwell admits to being proud of BOOK OF THE DEAD and she should be. ---- Harriet Klausner
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
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Posted May 3, 2012
My mommy loves this book
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Posted May 1, 2012
I have read all of Patricia's novels up until this one. I started reading and discovered the most filthy language she's ever used. I started to throw it out, but decided to give it a chance. When she told of the attempted rape by Marino, of all people, that was it for me! She must have been having some type of repressed anger going on in her personal life. Go read Postmortam Patricia! Now there was a good book! Shame on you for this one! No more for me!
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Posted April 22, 2012
Its a good story line, like the series, but the writing style was off. I like it better when she writes from Kay Scarpetta's point of view instead of third person like this one. It made it seem less charged.
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Posted February 18, 2012
Great read. keeps you on the edge of your chair. A real page turner
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Overview
Unabridged CDs - 9 CDs, 11 hours
From America's #1 bestselling crime writer comes the extraordinary new Dr. Kay Scarpetta novel.