Thursday, April 28, 2011

‘Postmortem’ by Patricia Cornwell


Patricia Cornwell is one of the best known crime/suspense writers and the Kay Scarpetta series is her best known work. Postmortem introduces Kay Scarpetta as the Chief Medical Examiner in Virginia. Scarpetta is investigating a series of deaths that are the work of a brutal serial killer. Women from a variety of different backgrounds are being killed and Scarpetta must overcome leaks to the press, accusations and personal battles to catch the murderer.

Whenever I read a suspense novel, my inclination is to try to figure out which of the characters is the killer (I think most people do this). Cornwell’s killer did not end up being the person that I expected – but of course I won’t spoil the surprise.

It is also interesting to note that this book was originally written in 1990. This means that many of the techniques for collecting and analyzing evidence that we take for granted aren’t available to these investigators. Even though they have the ability to collect and analyze DNA evidence, it doesn’t play a big role – one character says that he doubts a jury will convict someone based on DNA evidence. In my opinion, this just adds to the fun – Cornwell’s not-too-distant past is engaging to the very end.

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