Catherine ?Cat? Ferry is a forensic odontologist, a specialist in bite marks and the clues they provide. But while Cat's colleagues know her as a world-class scientist, she secretly attempts to manage her fragile psyche with alcohol, delving into the minds of rapists and murderers yet never allowing her own frightening past to creep into the foreground. Cat's latest case involves a disturbing murder in New Orleans. Banishing her personal demons, she focuses on the potential killer, until one morning she's paralyzed by a ...
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Catherine ?Cat? Ferry is a forensic odontologist, a specialist in bite marks and the clues they provide. But while Cat's colleagues know her as a world-class scientist, she secretly attempts to manage her fragile psyche with alcohol, delving into the minds of rapists and murderers yet never allowing her own frightening past to creep into the foreground. Cat's latest case involves a disturbing murder in New Orleans. Banishing her personal demons, she focuses on the potential killer, until one morning she's paralyzed by a panic attack at a grisly murder scene. Praying the attack is a onetime event, she continues her job as a consultant to the New Orleans Police Department, but when another victim dies in the same shocking way - raising fears that a serial killer is at large - Cat blacks out over the victim's mutilated corpse. Suspended from the FBI task force, plagued by nightmares, and at odds with her married lover - a homicide detective - Cat finally reaches her breaking point. In a desperate effort to regain control over a life spiraling out of control, Cat retreats to her hometown of Natchez, Mississippi. But her family's secluded antebellum estate provides no sanctuary. When some of Cat's forensic chemicals are spilled in her childhood bedroom, two bloody footprints are revealed. This sight shocks her more than any corpse she has seen in her career. Cat's father was murdered when she was eight years old, but she always believed the crime occurred in the garden outside their home. The bloody footprints suggest otherwise. Driven by this fragment of her past, Cat attempts a forensic reconstruction of the decades-old crime, even as developments with the New Orleans task force pull her back into the case she left behind. Plagued by troubling nightmares, Cat pieces together the horrifying events she has been shielded from all her life. Soon, both she and the FBI realize that the murders occurring now in New Orleans are intimately bound up with Cat's family and her past. Can Cat trust her own memories? Or has the truth been so distorted that she can never know her family's real history? Finding a solution to these intertwined murders means more than stopping a remorseless killer - it may be the only way to save Cat Ferry's sanity . . . and her life. Greg Iles is a masterful storyteller. In this dramatic novel of suspense he deftly probes the relationship between good and evil, and the unique power of human memory to reconstruct - or completely reinvent - the past.
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Add this copy of Blood Memory to cart. $43.21, good condition, Sold by Bonita rated 4.0 out of 5 stars, ships from Hialeah, FL, UNITED STATES, published 2005 by Brilliance Audio.
I am in the process of reading all of Greg Iles' books.
They are superbly written with all the intensity and
mystery you can imagine. Blood Memory is no exception.
RedAdept
Oct 1, 2008
Great Story
This is a well-written book with an extremely interesting story line. I have to admit that I guessed quite a bit before the ending, but it didn't matter. The writing made me want to see how the main character discovered things. However, not everything was a given; there were definite surprises to be found.
The author manages to handle an extremely taboo subject with grace and tactfulness. The book was well researched, also.
The main character was smart inher investigations, no dumb horror movie heroine here.
Try this one out & if you enjoy it, pick up some of Mr. Iles' other books. I have found him to be a terrific author with many varying genres.
innertemple
Apr 10, 2008
Is the South this bad??
Blood Memory by Greg Iles
An Amazon reviewer mentions in another review, that there racial aspect of the story. I agree that Mr. Iles presented a very negative portrait of the south. There are a number of references to black/white social interactions that shows slave/master relationships. Towards the end of the story there is lengthy dialog between Cat and Bill Neal where derogatory racial comments are made without any defense of the African American race. Based on this book, south still holds deep racial currents. The reader should note: The ?slaves? housed on the island enlisted to work for the grandfather. Pearlie, the self proclaimed ?house negro? maid, raising Cat from birth and disliked by others on the island (or is it in the field). The first suspect is a black male. Finally, a reference to Medgar Evers? preserved body in cap 55 was made without linking the civil rights related court case against Beckwith; see reference below:
n 1994, thirty years after the two previous trials had failed to reach a verdict, Beckwith was again brought to trial based on new evidence. During the trial, the body of Evers was exhumed from his grave for autopsy, and found to be in a surprisingly good state of preservation as a result of embalming. Beckwith was convicted of murder on February 5, 1994, after having lived as a free man for the three decades following the killing. Beckwith appealed unsuccessfully, and died in prison in January 2001. Reference: en.Wikipedia.org/wiki/Mdgar Evers
Other then the societal issues, the book presented a pretty clear cut mystery case. The plot twist wasn?t very surprising. All the characters fall into place in a neat logical fashion. I learned a lot about child related sexual abuse as well as the profound impact it has from generation to generation. The writing is clear and presents a comfortable read for a relaxing summer. The text is a bit long but I can?t see where you can just cut out a hundred pages without losing the great explanations it provides for the crimes. Over all its 3.5stars with a half star attributed to the fact that Cat ?freed the slaves? at end of the story.
ansuzbooks
Jan 28, 2008
excellent thriller
Greg Iles grows by leaps and bounds with each book. The details in this tale may not be for the faint of heart, but the author had addressed the taboo with sense and sensitivity all along. I think he did an outstanding job of creating whole and complex characters. They move the story along with an almost frantic pace that makes it hard to put this one down!
missstewart
Jul 23, 2007
I loved it.
This book keeps you interested in it's subplots as well as the main storyline. I was shocked with the ending and quite pleased once I finished reading it.