- EAN13
- 9780748109357
- Éditeur
- Sphere
- Date de publication
- 04/09/2008
- Langue
- anglais
- Fiches UNIMARC
- S'identifier
Livre numérique
-
Aide EAN13 : 9780748109357
-
Fichier EPUB, avec DRM Adobe
- Impression
-
Impossible
- Copier/Coller
-
Impossible
- Partage
-
6 appareils
5.49 -
Fichier EPUB, avec DRM Adobe
The fourth book in the Kay Scarpetta series, from No. 1 bestselling author
Patricia Cornwell.
'America's most chilling writer of crime fiction' The Times
The fingerprints say the murderer is the man who's just been executed . . .
At 11.05 one December evening in Richmond, Virginia, convicted murderer Ronnie
Joe Waddell is pronounced dead in the electric chair. At the morgue Dr Kay
Scarpetta waits for Waddell's body. Preparing to perform a post-mortem before
the subject is dead is a strange feeling, but Scarpetta has been here before.
And Waddell's death is not the only newsworthy event on this freezing night:
the grotesquely wounded body of a young boy is found propped against a rubbish
skip. To Scarpetta the two cases seem unrelated, until she recalls that the
body of Waddell's victim had been arranged in a strikingly similar position .
. .
Praise for the groundbreaking series:
'One of the best crime writers writing today' Guardian
'Devilishly clever' Sunday Times
'The top gun in this field' Daily Telegraph
'Forget the pretenders. Cornwell reigns' Mirror
'The Agatha Christie of the DNA age' Express
Patricia Cornwell.
'America's most chilling writer of crime fiction' The Times
The fingerprints say the murderer is the man who's just been executed . . .
At 11.05 one December evening in Richmond, Virginia, convicted murderer Ronnie
Joe Waddell is pronounced dead in the electric chair. At the morgue Dr Kay
Scarpetta waits for Waddell's body. Preparing to perform a post-mortem before
the subject is dead is a strange feeling, but Scarpetta has been here before.
And Waddell's death is not the only newsworthy event on this freezing night:
the grotesquely wounded body of a young boy is found propped against a rubbish
skip. To Scarpetta the two cases seem unrelated, until she recalls that the
body of Waddell's victim had been arranged in a strikingly similar position .
. .
Praise for the groundbreaking series:
'One of the best crime writers writing today' Guardian
'Devilishly clever' Sunday Times
'The top gun in this field' Daily Telegraph
'Forget the pretenders. Cornwell reigns' Mirror
'The Agatha Christie of the DNA age' Express
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