Pawsitive FEEDBACK!
|
EAN: 9780748109289 Edition: First Edition ISBN: 0748109285 Label: G. P. Putnam's Sons Manufacturer: G. P. Putnam's Sons Number Of Pages: 400 Publication Date: January 01, 2007 Publisher: G. P. Putnam's Sons Studio: G. P. Putnam's Sons Related Items:
Browse for similar items by category: Click to Display Average Rating:
![]() Rating: - Since when does Kay Scarpetta say idiotic things like "let's don't" ?This is truly the last Patricia Cornwell book I am going to read. First of all, I am an ative duty member of a uniformed service and I certainly hope that nobody who reads this book gets a bad impression of soldiers or sailors....the overwhelming majority of us hate war, hate killing, hate death, hate suffering and hate prejudice (including the prejudice against us). The comments she makes in the book about the war and particularly the Air Force are extremely uneducated to the point of almost being ... Read More Rating: - The Book of the DeadNot one of the best Cornwell books I have read, but never the less, held my attention to the end. Marino definately a mystery to uncover. Rating: - Book of the Deadgood book but not the best to come from Patricia Cornwell. It seems to be gettin a little off the track of the Scarpetta stories. Rating: - The victim is the only 'winner'Normally I find an author and read absolutely everything they've written. However, I have found that Ms. Cornwell's writing has become increasingly depressing, and at an alarming rate. With each new book, Ms. Cornwell has managed to drag every character, however peripheral, in Kay Scarpetta's infintesimal world further into a dysfunctional black hole. Each and every character should be on a ledge by now. At least the victim is lucky enough to be tortured and killed off early in the ... Read More Rating: - Who wrote this book?This book is very different from older Cornwell novels. She normally writes a first person, past tense narrative. This is written in an unusual third person, present tense. The characters in Book of the Dead are absolutely cartoonish in behavior and dialogue, unlike the more rational characters in previous books. I find it difficult to believe this is the same author. If this were my first Scarpetta Mystery, I would not read another.
|
||||










-
-
-
-