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Unnatural Exposure | 
| Author: Patricia Cornwell Publisher: G P Putnam's Sons Category: Book
Used (95) Collectible (6) from £0.01
Avg. Customer Rating: 18 reviews Sales Rank: 635259
Media: Hardcover Pages: 338 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.5 Dimensions (in): 9.3 x 6.2 x 1.3
ISBN: 0399142851 Dewey Decimal Number: 813.54 EAN: 9780399142857 ASIN: 0399142851
Publication Date: July 18, 1997
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| Customer Reviews: Read 13 more reviews...
Brilliant from start to finish December 6, 2007 8 out of 9 found this review helpful
'Unnatural Exposure' is the 8th book in the Kay Scarpetta series and begins when an old murder investigation, where a victims were dismembered and beheaded in Virginia and Ireland, is being looked into again as a new victim is found in a similar condition. As the investigation unfolds, the similarities make it seem less likely to be the same killer. When the next body turns up, Kay is faced with her most deadly enemy yet - a mutant form of the Smallpox virus.
From the start this book is so fast paced and goes straight into the action with Kay staying in Ireland to look into the 10 year old murders. All the usual characters such as Marino, Benton and Lucy return and instead of focussing on Kay's personal life, which let down some of the previous novels a little, Cornwell has put the main focus on the crimes and the investigations. I literally flew through this book as I was just so engrossed in it. The only let down being the very predictable killer (although this does have a very clever twist to it) and the rather rushed ending.
Overall this is one of the best of the Scarpetta books I have read so far (I've been reading them from the start and in order) and also ties up a lot of loose ends from storylines from previous novels. I just look forward to reading the rest of the series now.
Ridiculous ending - must try harder May 31, 2007 3 out of 4 found this review helpful
Right up to the end, this book is excellent - making the obvious allowance that Scarpetta just has to keep sticking her elegant nose into the police investigation and the police, for some unaccountable reason, don't tell her to shove off, as they certainly would in real life. But the ending! I won't reveal the name of the villain, but it's almost as if the author got to about page 340 without having the slightest idea who the murderer was, and then picked the single most unlikely character in the entire book as the bad guy - or girl, in this case. And this girl is a REALLY bad girl. She's infected her mother with smallpox that she stole two decades earlier from a laboratory in England, and has managed to keep viable in all that time. She then cut her mother into small pieces with an electric saw, after lopping her head off while she was still alive, and photographed the result. Then she filled atomiser sprays with smallpox virus and sent them out to selected victims. Oh, and shot to death an intruder along the way. But why? Why this catalogue of discriminate - and indiscriminate - assassination? Well, she didn't get the promotion she was hoping for and, as we all know, hell hath no fury like a woman who doesn't get the job she wants, so it all makes really good sense. It doesn't, of course. It makes no sense at all.
Moving on with life March 12, 2006 4 out of 4 found this review helpful
I liked this book. People change and life goes on. Looking back on my own life I see that I am someone other than the person I was 20 years ago. Fortunately Patricia Cornwell is catching this development in her books as well. Life for Kay Scarpetta is no less complicated than before. In addition to her work her relationship with her FBI lover and her FBI niece are still a challenge to her. But to Kay her first and foremost love is her work. She has a passion for forensics that probably drives those around her insane and yet seems to inspire them to achieve new heights. When she is caught up in a case, nothing else seems to matter. Of course, Cornwell shows that things are not that simple, but there is no doubt in my mind that work is Scarpetta's first love. How wonderful it would be to be in love with your own job. This time the story begins in Dublin. Kay is on a lecture stint in Ireland and is investigating the possible connection between bizarre murders in Richmond and Ireland. Dismembered and beheaded bodies turn up in dumps and it has not been possible to identify the victims. The MO between the murders in both places seem identical. Then something strange happens. A new body turns up in Richmond. It, too, has been dismembered and beheaded, but in all other aspects it differs from the other bodies - older victim and different dismembering tools. Bad goes to worse as the discovery of postules on the victims body raises questions. Then another body turns out (with all of its limbs in place). This time the postules are the same, but the victim is completely disfigured by them. It turns out that this is a smallpox related illness and a high alert goes out all over the country. This has become a race against time. This killer is obviously out to get the world.
Unnatural Exposure March 5, 2005 5 out of 6 found this review helpful
You could review this book, number eight in the Dr Kay Scarpetta books by Patricia Cornwell, one of two ways. On the one hand it is another good solid addition to the Scarpetta series of thrillers. It has all the usual ingredients, gory discoverings, Scarpetta's scientific examinations, a ruthless killer and the usual accompanying characters. One the other hand it is another good solid addition to the Scarpetta series of thrillers that offers nothing new to what has gone before. Indeed some of the regular characters are becoming so changed from their original conception you really wonder if you want to carry on with the series. There's not enough of Pete Marino in this book for a start, niece Lucy is still an enormous pain in the neck and Benton Wesley seems to be becoming a needy wimp with his constant whinging to Scarpetta. Scarpetta herself is so driven at times she must be an absolute nightmare to work for. What the series really needs is an insertion of some new blood, or at the very least the re-introduction of some the excellent minor characters we saw in previous offerings. Why can't sister Dorothy, who has only made one actual appearance in "The Body Farm", or even lawyer Nicholas Grueman who appeared in "Cruel and Unusual" reappear in some form or another to give the series a much needed injection of life.
Still excellent February 7, 2005 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
I will still give this book the highest mark, although I found its ending implausibly hurried. (Which made that I could read the book twice within two years or so, having forgotten the solution.) I also agree with another reviewer who thinks that Kay Scarpetta mysteries would be a lot better without the appearance of Lucy. But I wonder why nobody to my knowledge has remarked on another point. I duly accept the professional quality of the forensic stuff, knowing nothing about the area. But when Cornwell talks about computers, I feel that she tries to impress the reader with a lot of abbreviations and technical terms and to create an aura of mysticism about actually quite simple facts that are decribed better elsewhere. Which makes you doubt about the accuracy of the forensic stuff.
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