Collection: Livre 13 dans la collection Kay Scarpetta
Rating: Pas de note
Étiquettes: FR-Policier, Lang:fr
Résumé:
Cornwell's latest after the disappointing
Blow Fly has indomitable medical examiner Kay
Scarpetta returning to her office in Richmond five years
after being fired. This homecoming will cheer fans: not only
does the move put Scarpetta on her own turf, it reinvigorates
Cornwell's storytelling, restoring some of the spunk lately
lacking in her lead character. Dr. Joel Marcus, Scarpetta's
replacement as Virginia's chief medical examiner, has
summoned her back to help him puzzle through the mysterious
death of a 14-year-old girl. Marcus is generally loathed:
he's petty, inept, has a secret garbage-truck phobia and
harbors an intense hatred for Scarpetta. Meanwhile,
Scarpetta's niece Lucy, owner of a fabulously successful
private-eye firm, has her own troubles trying to sort out who
attempted to kill her friend Henri (short for Henrietta),
who's now under psychiatric treatment by Scarpetta's lover in
Aspen, Benton Wesley. Lurking in the background is Edgar
Allan Pogue, a nutcase who has a thing for dead bodies and a
grudge against Scarpetta. It's her job, as always, to connect
all the puzzling forensic dots and identify the killer in
time to save herself and her loved ones. She does this,
mostly, but leaves the reader to puzzle out a few salient
points on his or her own. Cumbersome backstory slows the
action, but in general the old Scarpetta comes through, at
least in the main, and this will be enough to reassure her
many fans and carry them over until her next appearance. _
BOMC, Literary Guild, Mystery Guild and Doubleday Book Club
main selection_.
Against advice from her niece Lucy, Kay Scarpetta answers
a request to return to the Richmond medical examiner's
office, the same office from which she was fired, to help
with the sensitive case of a dead teen. When she and Pete
Marino arrive, they find the new medical examiner to be a
vituperative, uncooperative martinet and the office that Kay
ran so efficiently in chaos. Two murders, oddly linked,
demand their attention. In the meantime, Lucy, still
unsettled despite her success with the Last Precinct
investigative agency, is having personal problems (there's
been an attack on her housemate), which strangely enough find
her treading the same path as her aunt Kay. Traces of the
smart, dynamic, yet vulnerable Scarpetta of the early novels
are in evidence here, and Cornwell has better control of her
plot and characters than in her last few efforts, faltering
only occasionally when psychobabble weighs things down. The
mystery is intriguing, there's plenty of forensic detail, and
the ending, though perhaps too abrupt, opens the way for
Scarpetta and her associates to proceed in any direction that
calls to them.
Stephanie Zvirin
From Publishers Weekly
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division
of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.From
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights
reserved