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Lippincott Q&A Review for NCLEX-RN, 12th edition is designed to help pre-licensure nursing students...
Biology and Ecology of Toxic Pufferfish
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This is the first comprehensive book on the biology and ecology of pufferfish, also known as...
Cannabis: A Complete Guide
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Cannabis sativa is best known as the source of marijuana, the world's most widely consumed illicit...
And the Dawn Came Up Like Thunder: Leo Rawlings: Prisoner of Japan and War Artist 1941-1945
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And the Dawn Came Up Like Thunder is the experience of an ordinary soldier captured by the Japanese...
The Inner Lives of Markets: How People Shape Them - And They Shape Us
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'...a quick, and exceedingly engaging, tour of economic history...' Financial Times What is a...
The Master and Margarita
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Mikhail Bulgakov's The Master and Margarita is a fiercely satirical fantasy that remained...
The Shooting Party
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Anton Chekhov's only full-length novel, this Penguin Classics edition of The Shooting Party is...
Charlie Cobra Reviews (1840 KP) rated Day of the Dead: Bloodline (2018) in Movies
Jul 7, 2020 (Updated Oct 26, 2020)
https://youtu.be/KTtNIIL3NXw
ClareR (5726 KP) rated The Silent Wife in Books
Jul 8, 2020
This story based around Will Trent (a GBI agent) and medical examiner Dr Sara Linton, is as dark and unsettling as the other books I’ve read. When the GBI is called in to investigate the death of an inmate during a penitentiary riot, another inmate, Daryl Nesbitt, offers them information about a series of terrible attacks, sexual assaults and murders of women in Grant County. Murders and attacks which almost exactly mirror the murders that he was convicted of and that he claims that he didn’t commit. He claims that Sara’s dead husband, Chief of Police Jeffrey Tolliver, and his fellow officer, Lena Adams, framed him.
There is enough in what he says for them to start looking in to past cases and to follow up on a more recent death.
No matter how gore-filled these books are, it’s never done in bad taste. The characters have respect for the dead women (I don’t think I’m giving too much away when I say it’s ‘women’, as in ‘more than one’), and they, to some extent, treat suspects with restraint. I really liked the extended flashbacks to Jeffrey Tolliver. They’ve certainly made me want to read more of the Grant County books.
I’m really glad that The Pigeonhole have serialised the last couple of Karin Slaughter books, and selfishly, I really hope they continue to do so! If you’re already a fan of Karin Slaughter books, you’ll understand. If you haven’t read any yet, what are you waiting for?
Darren Fisher (2447 KP) Dec 21, 2020