Book of the Dead by Patricia Cornwell
As a serial killer moves between the United States and Italy, Kay Scarpetta and her team try to piece together the clues — which include e-mails with pictures of other victims — to find the brutal slayer of an American tennis pro. Even returning from Italy to her new private forensics lab in Charleston, S.C., with forensic psychologist Benton Wesley’s engagement ring on her finger doesn’t ease the strain of their relationship, and it creates new problems with longtime co-worker Peter Marino.
Adding to Scarpetta’s problems is the discovery of a connection between the tennis pro murder, the unidentified body of a small boy and the manipulations of an emotionally disturbed psychotherapist who hates her.
You can find Book of the Dead by Patricia Cornwell here.
Coming Soon: Review of Book of the Dead by Patricia Cornwell
About Patricia Cornwell:
Born Patricia Daniels in Miami, Florida, she moved to North Carolina at age 7 following her parents’ divorce. While attending Davidson College, she met English professor Charles Cornwell, who she married and subsequently divorced after 10 years. After graduating with a degree in literature, she worked as a crime-reporter for the Charlotte Observer and spent six years working as a computer analyst for the Virginia Chief Medical Examiner’s Office. While there, she witnessed and, at times, assisted in hundreds of autopsies. She also served as a volunteer police officer.
Between 1984 and 1986, Cornwell wrote three novels based on her crime desk experience. All were rejected. Disheartened, she wrote to Sara Ann Freed, an editor at Mysterious Press, the one publishing house that had softened its rejection with encouragement. Freed suggested she dump the male detective who had been her central character and expand Scarpetta who had only played a minor role in the early works. So, in 1990 Patricia Cornwell’s first novel, Postmortem, was published. Postmortem was the first novel to win the Edgar, Creasy, Anthony and Macavity awards, as well as the French Prix du Roman d’Adventurei, in a single year. Fourteen subsequent Scarpetta novels have also become international bestsellers, together with Food to Die For and Scarpetta’s Winter Table. The fifteenth, Book of the Dead, was released in October of 2007.
Patricia Cornwell is also the author of three police procedural novels, A Time for Remembering, a biography of Ruth Graham, wife of the evangelist, and Portrait of a Killer: Jack the Ripper– Case Closed. She lives in Greenwich, Connecticut, and she supports several institutions that are concerned with forensic research, victim’s support, and animal rescue.