Books in Canada
On the first page of Blood Memory the author cleverly announces, so we begin in the middle, an artful device, which stirs anticipation for what might follow. Greg Iles, author of seven New York Times best sellers, is a proven master at drawing readers in from the outset. We are immediately told about a series of four murders of men whose ages range between 42 and 69. Each body is strangely mutilated by bite marks on various parts of their bodies.
Enter Catherine (Cat) Ferry, whose initial description caused me a moment of unease. Does any of this sound familiar? Were presented with a female investigator whose specialty is forensics. She is an alcoholic, and has a boyfriend of Irish descent-a lot like Kathy Reichs heroine, Tempe Brennan, dont you think? I quickly discovered, however, that the similarities ended there. Iles protagonist, Cat, an Odontologist who is a clever but seriously flawed individual, elicits both sympathy and admiration. At the scene of the fourth crime she suffers a panic attack and passes out. Knowing she is pregnant and the would-be father is her married beau, police detective Sean Regan, Cat assumes that her delicate condition is the reason for these attacks and fainting spells.
She is removed from the case and returns home to Natchez. At the antebellum estate owned by her grandfather, she hopes for some rest and relaxation. It was at this estate, twenty-three years ago, that Cats father had been shot and killed by an unknown person, hardly the ideal place to try to come to terms with her current problems. Predictably, Cat cant escape other frightening occurrences. When Luminol from her forensic kit is accidentally spilled on the carpet of her childhood bedroom, two bloody footprints are exposed. She considers whether these could be connected to her fathers murder and whether they could somehow be connected to her nightmares since his death.
When Sean informs Cat that a fifth murder resembling the earlier ones has taken place, she returns to New Orleans and is persuaded by the FBI to wear a wire while talking to Nathan Malik. Malik, a psychiatrist, has become a suspect in the murder case, but Cat is intrigued by Malik; she senses that they might have met somewhere in the past. Their relationship, with its hint of a mysterious connection, is developed to the books finale and it serves as a critical element in the resolution of this compelling story.
Back at Natchez, Cat is confronted by more sinister truths. An attempt on her life ushers in a number of interesting characters, all of whom play significant parts in Iles revelation at the conclusion of this imaginative, intelligent and suspenseful psychological novel.
It is to Iles credit that the novels tension and pace continues to its culmination, and that the evidence, clues and hints he introduces actually bear scrutiny rather than serving as mere props for his convenience. This is a satisfying read, masterfully written and never boring.
Desmond McNally (Books in Canada)
--Ce texte provient de la
Hardcover
édition.
From Publishers Weekly
Iles's previous thriller, 2003's provocative
The Footprints of God, featured an omnipotent supercomputer and an on-the-run duo racing around the globe from North Carolina to Jerusalem. This time, Iles returns to more familiar ground: Natchez, Miss.; New Orleans; and the Mississippi delta, where a serial predator has been killing middle-aged men. Forensic odontologist Cat Ferry, an expert on teeth and the damage they can inflict, is called in by the New Orleans PD to explain the bite marks found on the bodies. Cat, the alcoholic granddaughter of Dr. William Kirkland, owner of the sprawling Malmaison estate and the richest, most powerful man in Natchez, has solved previous murders with her married detective lover, Sean Regan. This time, though, she's pregnant with Sean's baby, and this plus the discovery of old bloody footprints hidden in the carpet fibers of her Malmaison childhood bedroom threaten to plummet her into the depression that's plagued her since she was 15. She thinks one footprint might be hers, made on the night her father died of an ill-explained gunshot wound. Iles weaves in dark strains of child sexual abuse and the resulting repressed memories as Cat searches for the serial killer and for answers about her father's death. This overlong novel lacks the scintillating originality that made Iles's last outing so memorable, but he ties up all the loose ends in an exciting climax.
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--Ce texte provient de la
Hardcover
édition.