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Rating:  Summary: Suspenseful Review: After a few really disappointing books, Leonard Goldberg has finally written a great thriller. The only problem I have is that they're referred to a medical thrillers and they're not. Yes, Joanna Blalock is a pathologist but the book is more of a "whodunnit". The book centres around a devastating explosion that killed several presumed terrorists. Dr. Joanna Blalock is called to the scene to investigate what is left of the victims. By piecing together the forensic evidence, Joanna unveils a horrifying, sinister plot.
Rating:  Summary: Suspenseful Review: After a few really disappointing books, Leonard Goldberg has finally written a great thriller. The only problem I have is that they're referred to a medical thrillers and they're not. Yes, Joanna Blalock is a pathologist but the book is more of a "whodunnit". The book centres around a devastating explosion that killed several presumed terrorists. Dr. Joanna Blalock is called to the scene to investigate what is left of the victims. By piecing together the forensic evidence, Joanna unveils a horrifying, sinister plot.
Rating:  Summary: A Tale Of Murder And Terrorism - Very Well Done Review: Author Leonard Goldberg has written a gripping tale that keeps the reader turning pages. It's hard to put this book down until you find out what happens. An experienced detective and a forensic pathologist pursue domestic terrorists who are bent on blowing up the president of the United States and scores of bystanders. The plot is an ingenious one with enough unexpected twists and turns to surprise even those of us who generally sniff out the ending of a mystery novel half-way through the story. I'll be looking for - and buying - the other Goldberg novels.
Rating:  Summary: Very well done Review: I have enjoyed some of Leonard Goldberg's medical thrillers in the past. However, he has stumbled with "Lethal Measures". Joanna Blalock is back as the brilliant pathologist and Jake Sinclair is also present as the crackerjack policeman who still holds a torch for Joanna. This time the subject is domestic terrorism, in the form of a small band of fanatics who will kill anyone to get back at the federal government. The characters never come to life in this book and the amateurish dialogue is painful to read. However, the author has done his research well and the details about forensic anthropology, bombmaking and prosthetic devices are fascinating and authentic. Unfortunately, a romantic subplot is thrown in almost as an afterthought. The body count is high, and there are details about what a bomb does to a human being that some might find distubring. The book needed sharper and more realistic dialogue and more originality in the plotting. As it stands, it is a run-of-the-mill thriller.
Rating:  Summary: If You Like Ridley Pearson, Try This! Review: I was browsing a local bookstore when I ran across this paperback edition of Dr. Goldberg's lastest Joanna Blalock/Jake Sinclair installment. If one has not tried this series and like such thrillers as ones written by Ridley Pearson, Michael Palmer and Robin Cook...READ THIS!I have been a Joanna Blalock/Jake Sinclair fan since the beginning installments of these characters written by Dr. Goldberg. I look forward to each new installment as much as I look forward to the Daphne Matthews/Lou Boldt installments from Ridley Pearson. I purchased the book on late Friday afternoon and had it finished by Sunday morning! It's like taking a breath taking ride on an awesome rollercoaster. In a couple of places my hearts was pumping so hard out of suspense that I actually had to put the book down before flipping the page in a few minutes. There are very few authors that I buy their books unseen or without ever cracking open the inside of the cover jacket to read the synopsis. Dr. Goldberg is among one of the elite to which I do this for. I usually purchase my books in the hardback version once they hit the bookshelves but somehow, this installment got passed me. I was most pleasantly surprised when I ran across the paperback version. Try it! You'll like it!
Rating:  Summary: Better than Cornwell Review: Joanna Blalock is a world-renowned forensic pathologist who's globally in demand, but centers her activities in Los Angeles' Memorial Hospital. At thirty-nine, Joanne feels she has achieved her life's goals just as she envisioned them. Even her personal life seems perfect as she sees the urbane international financier Paul du Maurier instead of wallowing over the inability of homicide detective Jake Sinclair to commit to a lasting relationship. However, national events soon rip Joanne's world apart. It starts with a terrorist bomb destroying a residential street, killing innocent people. The FBI insists that Joanne perform the autopsies, which cancels her romantic weekend. Paul resents the intrusion and abruptly ends their relationship. Evidence mounts that the perpetrators, the Righteous, plan for something ugly to occur on April 19th. Their motive is simply to revenge the Feds killing their leader's son and wife in a shoot-out. Anyone who enjoys a Patricia Cornwell tale will gain much pleasure from LETHAL MEASURES. The medical thriller stars a forensic pathologist with a great sense of self-deprecating humor ant that makes her more likable and gentler than Scarpetta. The fast-paced story line has touches of romance that provide a solid counterpoint to the rising tension that readers feel as they grasp the full scope of the terrorists' plan. Besides the characters seeming real, Memorial Hospital feels like a genuine place and that adds to the believability of the tale. After this story, readers will quickly search for other novels by Leonard Goldberg (see his "deadly" series). Harriet Klausner
Rating:  Summary: #5 in this poor series Review: Lethal Measures -- revised version -- by Leonard Goldberg = ?? #5 in the Lethally Poor Joanna Blalock/Jake Sinclair series Reviewer: Frank from Los Altos *spoilers* This 2000 book follows the typical "action" book where an evil greedy doctor causes havoc until he's caught, with far-right religious fanatics thrown in for laughs. In this story, after a large bomb explosion in Los Angeles home with sixteen dead and twenty-eight injured, the FBI demands that all the injured be treated at our heroine's hospital, Memorial Hospital, AND that the incredibly brilliant, beautiful and desirable Joanna perform all the autopsies herself -- autopsies which largely involve examining small body parts. Of course, as always, Joanna is perfection itself: her supervisor can't "believe someone so young and pretty could have that much brains." And her sometimes-boyfriend Jake? Joanna says, "He was so damn good-looking." Lest we miss the point, ten pages later we read, "Jake was so damn good-looking."
Rating:  Summary: #5 in this poor series Review: Lethal Measures -- revised version -- by Leonard Goldberg = Â Â #5 in the Lethally Poor Joanna Blalock/Jake Sinclair series Reviewer: Frank from Los Altos *spoilers* This 2000 book follows the typical "action" book where an evil greedy doctor causes havoc until he's caught, with far-right religious fanatics thrown in for laughs. In this story, after a large bomb explosion in Los Angeles home with sixteen dead and twenty-eight injured, the FBI demands that all the injured be treated at our heroine's hospital, Memorial Hospital, AND that the incredibly brilliant, beautiful and desirable Joanna perform all the autopsies herself -- autopsies which largely involve examining small body parts. Of course, as always, Joanna is perfection itself: her supervisor can't "believe someone so young and pretty could have that much brains." And her sometimes-boyfriend Jake? Joanna says, "He was so damn good-looking." Lest we miss the point, ten pages later we read, "Jake was so damn good-looking."
Rating:  Summary: #5 in this poor series Review: This 2000 book follows the typical "action" book where an evil greedy doctor causes havoc until he's caught, with far-right religious fanatics thrown in for laughs. In this story, after a large bomb explosion in Los Angeles leaves sixteen dead and twenty-eight injured, the FBI demands that all the injured be treated at our heroine's hospital, Memorial Hospital, AND that the incredibly brilliant, beautiful and desirable Joanna perform all the autopsies herself -- autopsies which largely involve examining small body parts. Of course, as always, Joanna is perfection itself: her supervisor can't "believe someone so young and pretty could have that much brains." And her sometimes-boyfriend Jake? Goldberg says, twice in ten pages, "Jake was so damn good-looking." In contrast, Murdock, the supervisor with whom Joanna frequently squabbles, "was aging so rapidly. His hair was now snow white, his face heavily lined and dotted with prominent age spots." Goldberg's message? In-group folks are Beautiful, while not-in-the-cool-group people age prematurely. Yet Goldberg frequently reports Joanna and Jake smoking. What's so attractive about that? Affected by being in the same city with Jake, Joanna turns to making Neanderthal threats: when the Boxing Commission won't turn over confidential records, Joanna threatens to confiscate all their files and issue a subpoena forcing the entire Boxing Commission to help search the files. To convince a rehab clinic to hand over its confidential records, Jake and Joanna threaten to "red-tape every office and door in this building and put a cop by each of them to make sure no chart or record leaves.... And it will stay that way -- until some judge sorts everything out for us." Jake tells a man's new widow, "if you're lying to me, you're going to need an attorney. A real good one." Bloopers and fractured history abound in this book. Triangulation of cell phone calls is NOT done "by plotting the lines of transmissions as they bounced off the satellite orbiting high above the earth." Cell phones do NOT directly transmit to, or receive from, satellites. Goldberg continues, "That was how they located O.J. Simpson in his Bronco on the freeway." Sorry, wrong again! What really happened in the O.J. case is that another driver recognized A.C. Cowlings as the Bronco passed, and phoned O.J.'s location to the police. Goldberg claims that an AK-47 can "fire a hundred rounds in seconds." While the top rate of fire of an AK-47 is six hundred rounds per minute, the rifle never fires a hundred rounds in seconds because its magazine size is thirty or forty rounds, and the barrel overheats quickly. Goldberg carries this lack of understanding into his rant against so-called Saturday night specials and "assault weapons." (Later, in Deadly Harvest, Goldberg confuses a .223 caliber bullet with a .50 caliber bullet.) Goldberg claims that Idaho vital statistics records are only kept in the county courthouse. As in most or all states, copies of Idaho vital statistics are kept in the state capital. Goldberg has the President's fictional secret service agent, Jack Youngblood, constantly worry about a replay of the Kennedy assassination, without mentioning whether Goldberg's "Jack Youngblood" is related to the real-life Rufus Youngblood, LBJ's secret service agent during the JFK assassination, and later deputy director of the agency. It is historically unclear whether JFK ordered agents off the rear bumper, and whether agents in that location could have prevented or lessened harm to JFK. What's the ending? Oh yes, Joanna escapes a perilous situation, with Jake's help, and saves the day. Surprised? I think not. The only real decision Joanna faces in this book is which man to date. And Jake is faced with no challenges but to do his job, threaten those who cross him, and pursue the goddess Joanna. This book is not recommended, unless you're competing in the "See How Many Mistakes YOU Can Find" contest, or thoroughly enjoy one-dimensional wooden characters.
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