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J**L
Cut the personal stuff!
I loved reading earlier Scarpetta books all the way back to her first one, and I faithfully read every new one that came out for a long time, right up to "Blowfly." Then I got hold of Kathy Reichs's books, "Fatal Voyage" being the first, I was hooked, and I began to analyze why I liked Reichs more than Scarpetta. "Port Mortuary" is my return to reading Scarpetta after four years and I discovered why I stayed away so long.I am pretty sick of her whining about Marino and Lucy and Benton. It really does get old so get on with the CASES, please! I am a professional content editor, so I hope I project some modicum of credibility.Cornwell's scientific and forensic knowledge is excellent, and her ability to build a case is beyond reproach. But all the injections and interruptions of personal angst and sturn und drang is SO annoying, I end up skimming over fifty percent of the book.
L**N
... Cornwell delivers another compelling thriller featuring one of her favorite characters, Dr
Bestselling author Patricia Cornwell delivers another compelling thriller featuring one of her favorite characters, Dr. Kay Scarpetta who finds herself solving one of the most deadliest cases of her entire career!........After fulfilling a six-month obligation of hard training by dealing with death on behalf of the US government's armed forces, chief medical examiner for the Commerce of Massachusetts Dr. Kay Scarpetta is about to confront one of the most bazaar murder cases of her entire career. As director of (CFC)Cambridge Forensic Center and Port Mortuary, Kay finds herself investigating the crime scene of a young man who's murder was captured on a digital recording, and not only was he stabbed by an unknown assailant, but he was speared in the back by a high-tech instrument, and she's about to discover that this case was much closer to home than she ever thought possible. When the murders of a football player, and a little boy are discovered, Kay is stunned to learn that her Deputy Chief medical examiner Jack Fielding has disappeared without a trace, and as she digs deeper in all three cases, the evidence leads her with startling results, but not before she is plagued by chilling questions. Were the two murders connected in both deaths? More important, why was her employee missing from the face of the earth? Because he gave false information on the little boy's cause of death? What has happened to Jack Fielding? What trouble has he caused? Could the small boy's death be related to the dead man lying in the morgue? Was she dealing with some renegade scientist, or even worse, more than one? As Kay delves even deeper when the trace evidence leads her to the unfathomable truth, nothing will prepare her for the unbelievable realization when she is forced to face the shocking truth of disloyalty, mistrust, and betrayal by those she loved most in the world both professionally and personally!........
A**R
Interesting
I was on vacation at the beach recently, and the cabin had this book. I was a huge Cornwell fan in the 90s. This book was OK, but like the other reviews said, Cornwell has these bizarre absolutely narcissistic segments of her work that simply detract from the story. I ended up not finishing the book at the beach, but buying it on Kindle because I had 80 pages to go and the other reviews said this was a can't-miss segment of the book. Despite my misgivings, they were right. I used to love Cornwell novels, but lately her work isn't as good. This will be the last one I read.
M**A
A really sad end to a long period of reading Cornwell
This is the last book I read by Ms. Cornwell. I loved the Scarpetta series in the beginning and until thebook where Benton Wesley returns alive. After that my enthusiasm continued to wane. It seemed likethe promise of those early books disappeared as soon as she resurrected him in that book. A lot of thethings that happened after that in various books were not true to the characters she had created. I canremember talking in our office when we heard the rumor that a main character was going to be killedoff. We all voted for it to be Benton because we did not particularly like him. He was kind of a fake guy.Pete was necessary to the story and we really could not see her killing off Lucy. Therefore, Benton wasour candidate and it was correct. Then, he gets to return and the books take a turn for the trash. Thislast one for me was so bad I barely finished it. Where in the past I finished it in a few hors this one tooka month and it was torture. After this one I have not touched another Cornwell. I have autographedcopies of most and I will probably put them on ebay. I will not buy another book by her. I may borrowone from a library, but it is unlikely since I bought this book in 2010 and I am reviewing it now and havenot read any other book by this author. Maybe sometimes people have a certain number of books inthem??
D**R
Scarpetta past her sell by
I gave up on this book after the first few chapters. Cornwell has long since fallen in love with her own creation. Scarpetta is seen by those nearest to her as a kind of goddess. Scarpetta's human and scientific humility evident in Cornwell's brilliant debut, 'Post Mortem', seems to have abandoned her. I have had enough of her. I've also had enough of Cornwell's irritatingly idiosyncratic use of 'and' to join statements quite unconnected.
S**N
Enjoyable return to form
I was getting bored of the life and work of Kay Scarpetta, but I am glad that I persevered. Port Mortuary sees a return to the first person narrative of the earlier books and is the better for it.With the last few in the third person, I was annoyed by all the jumping between characters yet there still seeming to be huge gaps in the readers knowledge meaning that we didn't have enough information to "solve" the crimes ourselves. With the first person narration, we are back with Kay's POV and so any lack of knowledge on our part is understandable because we only know what she knows.The plot is a little convoluted, and perhaps you could even call it contrived, having the murders so close to where she and Benton live, but if the crimes were not close to them, then the question could by why would they be involved?The whole story taking place over just a couple of days, so the pace rattles along just nicely. One bugbear is the introduction of a previously unmentioned military past for Kay.Overall, I enjoyed this book and for me, it is a return to form.
P**M
I got bored...
I am still a fan but this was too far fetched and the ending? no way.... Also, it is disconcerting to have the book back to the 1str person, narrated as Dr Scarpetta's POV. I remember how disconcerted it was to have it changed all of a sudden to the 3rd person, as if it was not the same author, then I got used to it and now, Patricia Cornwell is writing Dr Scarpetta again in the 1st person...Though I prefer it this way...My main concern, once again, Patricia Cornwell is forgetting that her audience are not doctors or forensic experts and the language is too technical. I find myself skipping a lot of pages because of this only to find out I have to go back because I miss some of the plot.But Port Mortuary is not very realistic, in my opinion...3 stars because as I said, I am still a fan.
T**S
Not her best
It started quite promising but the was spoiled by Scarpetta’s annoying phobia of either being followed or thinking someone is out to get her. Very frustrating. I gave up before the end. Not a patch on her earlier work.
G**1
Would demand a refund if I could & the time back !
OH DEAR ! - I realised reading this was a bad idea app 4 chapters in , really should have given it up as a bad job then , persevered to the end & very much wish I hadn't, masses of tedious tec detail , such hard going !As I mentioned in my previous review , I so enjoyed the earlier novels in the series but after the last two I have read, I very much doubt I would read another in the Scarpetta series..... maybe not another Cornwell at all ....What on earth is going on Patricia ?
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