Rating: Summary: BIG disappointment for Cornwell/Scarpetta fans Review: I've read all of Patricia Cornwell's Scarpetta novels, and both the Andy Brazil books and loved them all.Eagerly, I bought Blow Fly and started in. I wasn't sure if time had just taken it's toll on my reading desires, or if the book was truly as disappointing as I found it. It was the latter. Like other reviewers, I felt the book seemed to jump around with very little flow and there was VERY little of the forensic aspect that attracted so many to Scarpetta in the first place. The plots have become so far-fetched and ridiculous it's tough to enjoy the book with a straight face. The book also ends in a way that leaves the reader KNOWING there will be an equally-bad follow up. If Patricia Cornwell is unable to continue the Scarpetta stories with the intelligence, wit and drama we've all grown accustomed to, it's time to retire the character and start with something fresh and (hopefully) better.
Rating: Summary: Another Disappointing Cornwell Ramble Review: Just BORROW the book - I keep wondering what the hell has happened to the finely plotted and wonderfully detailed novels of the Patricia Cornwell of the past. This one is not quite as bad as the last two - Black Notice and The Last Precinct. But the Hurry-Up ending smacks so much of Poirot in the drawing room finale, it's hardly worth the bother. Do you not have an editor, Miss Cornwell? Do you think your name alone will sell your books? Do you think we are stupid? Too bad - another once-fine writer has gone over the edge into unbelievable plots, superficial wand-waving, and too much teen-age-girl-angst-type dialog. GET A GRIP!
Rating: Summary: I'm a Huge Cornwell Fan Review: I've read EVERY book she has written. I am devoted and constantly recommend her books to friends and family. I was pleasantly surprised with the Chardonne family story line being re-introduced. And there were other welcome surprises in the story. I finished it in 2 days. But I missed the story being told by Dr. Scarpetta. I missed the story being centered around her. Dr. Scarpetta was almost a fringe character. I look forward to the direction of where Dr. Scarpetta and her entourage of friends/family end up in the next novel. No idea where we could be led.
Rating: Summary: Cornwell's Scarpetta Novel Jumps the Shark Review: Can we ever finally end the silly saga of the wolf man or whatever he is and his evil twin brother? The whole thing is ridiculous and incomprehensible. The only thing Blow Fly has going for it is another photo of Cornwell on the back cover looking like a Stepford Meg Ryan. I think that one Meg Ryan in the world is more than enough. This book is poorly written and just plain idiotic--and I'm a Cornwell fan! At least I used to be. Also please note, if you are an animal lover (as I am) be forewarned that there are some disturbing situations that may upset you in this terrible story. I am so disgusted with this book that I will not attempt to resell it on Amazon--instead, it's going straight into my garbage recycle bin. Cornwell needs to get her act majorly together with the next one, or retire the great Scarpetta forever. A really shameful effort.
Rating: Summary: not as bad as i heard Review: I was pleasantly surprised by this latest Cornwell attempt. It was a nice shift away from the wordy self indulgence of the last few Scarpetta novels, reading hundreds of pages of moody introspection from a character who was capable of better. I liked the 3rd person prose and the character development of her supporting cast, and feel like I can actually care about them again. I agree the last few chapters were a bit choppy (cranky editor?) but I would recommend this book to my other Scarpetta fans. Be prepared for something different!
Rating: Summary: Ms. Cornwell, where have you gone? Review: It is with deep sadness that I must inform fellow readers--especially those who have been and still are Cornwell fans--that I cannot recommend this book as a "good read." I gave it 2 stars because flashes of the Cornwell we all know and respect appear every so often throughout--tight narrative, wonderful characterization, exquisite scene detail, taut dialogue. Cornwell is one of the few writers who can turn crime scenes into macabre poetry, who can resurrect the violently deceased with the turn of a phrase and the punch of a character's ruminations; who can quite honestly humanize the monstrous. Truly gifted as a writer, I cannot condemn the book on its stylistic flow. However, with regard to storyline, I must respectfully ask: where the hell is Kay Scarpetta? What the hell just happened here? Dr. Kay Scarpetta relocates to Florida in the wake of all that happened in "The Last Precinct." Demoted, I suppose we could say, she serves now as a "consultant" and "lecturer." The first third of the book provides a window to Scarpetta's continued grief over losing her job, her Richmond life, and profiler Benton Wesley (presumably dead). But trouble's afoot in the form of the international cartel of the Chandonne family. Jean-Baptiste is on death row in Texas, Jean-Paul, his beautiful twin brother, is murdering women outside Baton Rouge, a city gripped with the serial murders of women (and I'm assuming Ms. Cornwell is basing this storyline on the actual murders that were occurring in BR tracked in the media since 2001 or thereabouts). Scarpetta finds herself intrigued by a Baton Rouge policewoman who attends one of the "great forensica's" seminars. Will Scarpetta mentor her? Sadly, that storyline is not developed. Nic Robillard (a refreshing character providing one of the only sparks in this turgid plotline) is trying to crack the BR murders but runs up against old-school Louisiana corruption and politics. But then her history is implausibly tainted by the revelation that her own mother was murdered by Jean-Paul years before; a case that remains unsolved until the end of "Blow Fly." Suffice it to say that hijinks ensue. Jean-Baptiste begins sending letters to Scarpetta (he'll tell her all his secrets since he's about to be executed--as long as she administers the lethal cocktail in the death room on his day); he allegedly sends letters to Lucy, who ends up on some absurd sidetrack in Poland where she and her partner Rudy stage the suicide of Jean-Baptiste attorney Rocco Caggliano (Marino's son). Meanwhile, Jean-Paul and henchwoman Bev are continuing to murder women in BR. Why? What are they doing? What's the greater purpose? Readers are left wondering. As if all this wasn't enough in the realm of implausibility, one of Scarpetta's ghosts shows up as the great manipulator behind all these "coincidences" that will bring down the Chandonne empire and save Scarpetta from a horrid death at the hands of Jean-Paul or perhaps his brother Jean-Baptiste, who we all know will most likely escape Texas's death row as the predictability of his continued appearances throughout the book leads us to wonder why he's playing such a central role. This reader has been terribly disappointed with Scarpetta's character devolution (development, in this sense, strikes me as perhaps something positive and what's going on with Scarpetta is far from that) since "Last Precinct." Actually, since Cornwell opted to involve Scarpetta romantically with Wesley. Rather than maintaining the Scarpetta edge, Cornwell has reduced the doctor to a depressed, ineffective, woefully unprepared shadow of her former self. She plays little role in this book and gets her hands dirty in only one crime scene toward the end of the book. What is it about crime writers who hook their female characters up in somewhat serious relationships with men? The characters invariably lose their edges and spend all their time obsessing about the whereabouts or wherefors of the men in their lives. That's NOT the Scarpetta I came to enjoy reading. Nor is it entirely realistic. If Cornwell wants to involve Scarpetta with a man, fine. But why must Scarpetta lose herself, lose her abilities as a brilliant forensic pathologist and do nothing but pine away for a guy who was cheating on his wife with her? Quite frustrating. Meanwhile, Lucy is off galivanting across eastern Europe, manipulated by the puppeteer I won't reveal here. She struggles with HER ghosts, as well and I ended up not having much respect for her as a character. What happened to her? She's rude, mouthy, impulsive to the point of endangering everyone around her, confused, and angry. She didn't learn that from Scarpetta; where did she learn all these bad behaviors? I couldn't find much redemptive about Lucy this time around--one of the many disappointments in this book. For his part, Marino continues to be caught up in his odd (but believable) longing for Scarpetta and his horrendously unhealthy lifestyle. In short, the first third of the book was the best of this mess. The story is introduced, Scarpetta is talking forensics, Nic Robillard looks like a potentially new and interesting character. Then a series of bizarre yet orchestrated coincidences occur, all linked to the Chandonne cartel (would Ms. Cornwell PLEASE stop it with the Chandonnes? It's as if she's trying to morph into a Robert Ludlum with this international intrigue angle). In the end, readers are left with a story that is barely connected by the loosest of threads (most so implausible as to border on ridiculous), the unfortunate reintroduction of a ghost from Scarpetta's past, a forensic investigator incapacitated by her longing for a once married, presumably dead man, and a series of characters who, like actors trying valiantly to save a sunken script, move woodenly across the once brilliant stage Cornwell created in "Postmortem." Alas, Scarpetta. Alas Cornwell. We thought we knew ye.
Rating: Summary: Borrow don't buy Review: V. disappointed. It almost seemed that it was written by someone other than Patricia Cornwell. If this had been her first book, I would not have read another. Does a disservice to her previous novels. Barbara.
Rating: Summary: Blow Fly BLOWS!!! Review: I am glad that my public library had the latest Scarpetta offering. It saved me the anguish over losing $26 on a piece of not so hot fiction. Cornwell should be disappointed over this stinker as most of her loyal readers seem to be. It's the worse soap opera script ever written and Patricia...YOU should be ashamed of yourself to treat your loyal readers to such drivel! It's a waste of time to read and long winded. Where were the editors!!!! Thank God Kathy Reichs came out with hers first. Help us Linda Fairstein...we are suffering from novel withdrawl! Save your money kids!!! Check it out of the library if you have to read it. Amazon has much better offerings!
Rating: Summary: Blow Me Away.......... Review: If someone had told me I'd finish reading this book and throw it across the room in disgust I'd have said never. I love Kay Scarpetta and looked forward to the release of this book with great anticipation. What a disappointment! What happens to these writers after a few very successful books? Does their success go to their heads and they forget what their fans want? I finished reading the last page of this book and sat there thinking this must be a mistake, where is the rest of the book?! Don't waste your time and money on this one.
Rating: Summary: Not worth your time - a really BAD book! Review: I agree that this was the worst book I have read in a very long time. Like other reviewers, I WAS a Cornwell fan, but not any longer. If anyone else had written this trash, it would have never been published. What a disappointment and a rip-off. No more of my time or money will go to Cornwell.
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