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The Body Farm | 
enlarge | Author: Patricia Cornwell Publisher: Berkley Publishing Group Category: Book
List Price: £3.56 Buy Used: £0.01 You Save: £3.55 (100%)
Used (4) from £0.01
Rating: 6 reviews Sales Rank: 1239716
Media: Mass Market Paperback Edition: Limited Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3 Dimensions (in): 6.8 x 4.2 x 1
ISBN: 0425148637 Dewey Decimal Number: 813 EAN: 9780425148631 ASIN: 0425148637
Publication Date: December 1994 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days Shipping: International shipping available Condition: ...UK SELLER... Guaranteed in stock, posting daily from our warehouse in the UK. Trusted, Reliable and Established booksellers.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 1 more reviews...
Really Good September 27, 2006 dizzyshelly (Poole, England) 1 out of 3 found this review helpful
This is the second book I have read by Cornwell and also the second in this series. I really enjoyed it and thought it was actually better then the previous one I read (Cruel and Unusual I think). I defo will be reading the rest of this series.
The Body Farm June 1, 2005 3 out of 6 found this review helpful
Cornwell does it again. Another trip into the horrors of forensic pathology, with a smattering of the main characters' private lives thrown in, in a way that accentuates the story rather than turning it into a soap. You will have to read the rest now, then all of them again, in order! Great Stuff!
The Body Farm January 17, 2005 Rich Milligan (Thatcham, Berkshire) 4 out of 6 found this review helpful
Being number five in the series of Dr Kay Scarpetta novels, any fan would now be enjoying not only the excellent individual storylines of these books, but also enjoying the connecting themes that run through the series. Unfortunately this is where The Body Farm fell a little short of the previous books for me.**Possible Spoilers** Firstly again Scarpetta has undergone a major personal change since the last book that doesn't seem to be totally covered. At the end of the previous book, Cruel and Unusual, she was planning to work more closely with FBI Profiler Benton Wesley and then this books starts with her not only working with him but embarking on an affair with him also. Whilst I don't question the possibility of this happening it would have been nice to have had longer to see the relationship develop, not see them jump into bed in the opening chapters. Secondly the book centres on the happenings of Lucy, Dr Scarpetta's niece, who was never my favourite character in the books. Whilst trying to explain Lucy's insecurities and anger at her own mother I've always found her character comes over as spoilt and ungrateful rather than sad and tragic. At first I was dreading reading so much about her, but actually by the time of finishing the book I have warmed slightly to her character, not least because the books describes the first face to face meeting of Dr Kay and Lucy's mother, her sister, Dorothy. A wonderful self-centred bitchy character that is great fun to read. The actually "thriller" storyline in the book is good, but again not maybe as good as some of those that have gone before. Scarpetta, who is forever reminding everyone else that evidence and proof is needed to suspect someone of a crime, seems to leap on the eventual suspect in this murder very early on and pursues her on what seemed to me to be very flimsy clues. Not the strongest book in the series, but I will definitely return for more.
The best Scarpetta Novel by far January 28, 2004 3 out of 6 found this review helpful
I loved this book more than any of the other Scarpetta novels. It is just so fast paced and keeps you on the edge of your seat all the way through wondering who's the goody / baddy and you learn a lot about forensic science along the way. Very informative and a fab you won't be able to put it down read.
THERE IS NO FARMER IN THE DELL...ONLY A KILLER... January 1, 2003 Lawyeraau (Balmoral Castle) 25 out of 27 found this review helpful
This story begins in the mountains of North Carolina, where eleven year old Emily Steiner lived. She had left a youth meeting at her church one afternoon and was on her way home. She never arrived. A week later, her nude, lifeless body was found. Kay Scarpetta, medical examiner and noted forensic pathologist, is called in by the North Carolina authorities, After an initial review, she believes that the murder may have been commited by serial killer, Temple Gault. Long known to the FBI, He has managed to elude capture and remains at large. More careful review of the forensic evidence, however, leaves her with unanswered question that initially puzzle her. As she endeavors to untangle these strange and tantalizing clues, she realizes that they begin to point away from Gault and in a direction more horrifying than anyone ever imagined. Meanwhile, Dr. Scarpetta must contend with other issues closer to home. Her troubled niece, Lucy, an intern at the FBI facility at Quantico, becomes enmeshed in a legal controversy that threatens to derail her future employment hopes. Scarpetta's long time associate and homicide detective, Pete Marino, may have bitten off more than he could chew and has personally gotten involved with Emily Steiner's mother. Meanwhile, Dr. Scarpetta, herself, is undergoing a certain amount of personal angst over the sexual tension that is building between her and married FBI agent, Benton Wesley. All these personal concerns overlay her investigation for Emily Steiner's killer. The forensic questions that arise from Emily's murder lead Dr. Scarpetta to "The Body Farm", a secret research facility in Tennessee, where some of the answers to her questions may be found. It is the forensic clues and their analysis by Dr. Scarpetta that provide the most interesting aspects of the book. All in all, It is another excellent addition to the Kay Scarpetta series and well worth reading.
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