Livid A Scarpetta novel

Patricia Daniels Cornwell

Book - 2022

When the sister of the judge presiding over a sensational murder case is found dead, chief medical examiner Kay Scarpetta, the reluctant star witness in the trial, investigates and recognizes telltale signs of the unthinkable, pitting her against a powerful force that returns her to the past.

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Subjects
Genres
Thrillers (Fiction)
Novels
Detective and mystery fiction
Published
New York : Grand Central Publishing 2022.
Language
English
Main Author
Patricia Daniels Cornwell (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
351 pages ; 24 cm
ISBN
9781538725160
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

In the twenty-sixth Kay Scarpetta novel (following Autopsy, 2021), the newly appointed chief medical examiner of the state of Virginia is called to testify in a high-profile murder trial. During the proceedings, the judge's sister dies under bewildering and suspicious circumstances. Could there be a connection to the murder trial? Could the dead woman's job (she's the CIA's press secretary) have something to do with it? Is her husband somehow involved? Questions pile on top of questions until Scarpetta feels echoes from her past, and everything changes. The Scarpetta series has had its ups and downs, but the last few books have been right on target, and this one continues the hot streak. Cornwell once again seems fully in sync with the character she created more than 30 years ago, and the story is guaranteed to keep the reader guessing.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Bestseller Cornwell's solid 26th Kay Scarpetta novel (after 2021's Autopsy) opens with Kay, now Virginia's chief medical examiner, testifying at a controversial murder trial, which has attracted media attention thanks to the angry and vocal friends, family, and supporters of the victim, former beauty queen April Tupelo. No sooner has Kay left the courtroom than she's called to a crime scene. CIA employee Rachael Stanwyck, the sister of judge Annie Chilton, who's presiding over the Tupelo case, is lying dead on the kitchen floor of Annie's secluded country house. Kay is immediately struck by the eerie lack of bird, insect, and animal life surrounding the house, leading her colleague and brother-in-law, Pete Marino, to comment, "Is it just me? Or is something weird going on?" Another brutal death, a failed presidential assassination, a band of homegrown terrorists, and more all take their turn stirring the pot of weirdness. The story line at times gets lost amid extended descriptions of crime scene examinations and autopsy techniques, as well as interactions with difficult colleagues and Kay's eternally petulant sister. This fact-filled entry isn't Cornwell's best, but fans will be satisfied. (Oct.)

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Review by Library Journal Review

Forensic pathologist Kay Scarpetta testifies in a case, fumbled by the initial pathologist, concerning a drowned beauty queen whose fiancé is charged with her death. Then the judge's sister is murdered. With a 400,000-copy first printing.

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

Another 15 rounds for Virginia chief medical examiner Dr. Kay Scarpetta and her well-placed enemies past and present. Why is her old law school roommate, Judge Annie Chilton, allowing Alexandria's Commonwealth's Attorney Bose Flagler to beat up Scarpetta on the witness stand? Normally the state's CME would be on the prosecutor's side, but this time Scarpetta is determined to testify that her predecessor, the late Dr. Bailey Carter, who had rapid-onset dementia, mistakenly called beauty queen April Tupelo's drowning murder, leading to the arrest of her live-in Romeo, Gilbert Hooke. Even so, Chilton's rulings seem consistently heedless of Scarpetta's formidable reputation and personal feelings, as if the judge were distracted by something. Maybe she's having previsions about her sister, CIA press secretary Rachael Stanwyck, who's soon found dead in the kitchen of the judge's family estate, rendering the introductory case moot to everyone but the protesters who attack Scarpetta, bellowing "JUSTICE FOR APRIL!" and providing the media with more anti-Scarpetta grist. Certainly Cornwell seems to forget about it in her eagerness to linger over the diabolical, state-of-the-art murder weapon by which the judge's sister met her doom and to evoke the endless infighting among Scarpetta, her nemesis, Virginia health commissioner Dr. Elvin Reddy, and his minions. A second (or is it a third?) murder provides the basis for more of the post-mortem set pieces that make fans of this long-running series salivate, and it's especially gratifying to see Scarpetta wring important evidence from a dust bunny. But the forensics mean more to Cornwell than the suspects, and the ideal reader of this installment won't care any more than she does whodunit. As usual, the dead are just more interesting than the living. Something to look forward to. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.