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Blood Memory

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Description:

Forensic expert "Cat" Ferry has a stellar reputation until a panic attack paralyzes her at a New Orleans murder scene. Praying the attack is a one-time event, she continues working, but when the same killer strikes again -- raising fears that a serial killer is at large -- Cat blacks out over the victim's mutilated corpse. Suspended from the FBI task force, Cat returns to her hometown of Natchez, Mississippi, to regroup. Though her colleagues know her as a world-class forensic odontologist, Cat lives a secret life. Plagued by nightmares, and deeply involved with a married homicide detective, Cat holds herself together with iron nerves and alcohol, using her work as a substitute for life. 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 discovery sets in motion a quest to piece together Cat's past -- buried memories that could tie her father's murder to the grisly deaths occurring in New Orleans in the present. For only by finding this remorseless killer can Cat save her sanity -- and her life.

Product Details:
Average Customer Rating: based on 148 reviews
Customer Reviews:
Average Customer Review: 4.0 ( 148 customer reviews )
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

21 of 21 found the following review helpful:

5one of Iles' best booksFeb 21, 2005
By mackattack9988 "mackattack9988"
Blood Memory ranks right up there with the best of Greg Iles' novels to date, such as The Quiet Game and Mortal Fear. He is really talented at weaving complicated suspense with interesting characters, and in this book he returns to the Mississippi setting he knows so well. There are even appearances from characters and a storyline from two of his previous books, so that's a little extra fun for readers familiar with his work. What makes Iles' books even more appealing is the range of topics that he explores. Each book is a well-written suspense tale, and Blood Memory is no exception. I think it's his best book by far since The Quiet Game. The topical subject matter of Blood Memory is a troubling reality. While the basic plot idea of vengeance in this arena has been tried by other authors, Iles tells a more powerful story across the spectrum of predator and prey. This book really has a lot going for it: classic Iles suspense, detailed forensics, strong female characters, and vivid storytelling. Not only is it a hard book to put down, it's also one that will be hard to forget.

116 of 139 found the following review helpful:

5Bloody Great Book!Feb 20, 2005
By ellen "ellen in atlanta"
This reviewer is not one who like a child in class tells you the plot of a novel - you are mature enough to read the plot line when you are contemplating the book to buy.
What I want to tell you is why you should choose this book, or any Greg Iles books.
He not only chooses diverse subjects for each books, but almost all of his books have a lyric quality in his writing, that makes layers upon layers as you read - there is beauty in his style that is magic. I can quote passages from his earlier works, and not many can say they do that with other authors. I sent a 'fan letter' to Iles and he was gracious and I was impressed.
I call him our generation's Faulkner, because he not only knows the South, but knows how to portray it not in black and white, but how it weaves its spell into the plot of the novel.
If you have not read Mortal Fear and The Quiet Game, they are definite must haves. The others are excellent, but have varying impact on the reader. Blood Memory stands out among his excellent works - and is worth the wait we fans had to endure.
Usually his works come out in September, and we had some time to wait this time, but it is worth it.
This is a man who has a gift. Read the plot above, or others' reviews that read like a book review in school, although the book's subject is serious. What I am here to tell you is WHY to buy a book. It hits you on many levels and makes you think as well as experience. And that makes the difference between a good writer and a great one.

15 of 15 found the following review helpful:

4Dark Blood, Deep MemoryMar 05, 2005
By T. Slaven
At age 31, Cat Ferry has it all going for her: brains, beauty, family wealth, and an accomplished career in a branch of the dental sciences that puts her into frequent contact with police officers solving intriguing crimes. But Cat Ferry is a mess: dental school was a refuge from the medical school she was asked to leave, she has a string of broken relationships with older men, alcoholism is a likely diagnosis, and her current relationship with a married police officer is quickly reaching its crisis point. The good and the bad converge as Cat is drawn into the solution of two mysteries. One involves a series of bizarre related homicides in her adopted city of New Orleans. The other involves the unsolved murder of her own father decades earlier in her home city of Natchez. Is there a relationship between these two series of events so removed in time? It begins to seem so as Cat becomes the Clarice Starling to a (fortunately) non-cannibalistic psychiatrist who both figures obscurely in her own past and emerges as a link among the New Orleans homicide victims. Cat's journey toward the solution of these mysteries has as many twists and turns as the river that connects the two central points in the story, and it takes place against a menacing background of power, passion, violence and repressed memory that is just as raw and threatening as the bayous that predominate the landscape between her two homes, then and now.

This book is very good reading for several reasons. First, it is very different from much popular mystery fiction today, which tends to be formulaic and abbreviated. So many of today's mystery novels, with their one-dimensional characters, trite plots, and brief chapters seem to be slightly pumped-up versions of screenplays that their popular authors hope to option to the movies as soon as the books ascend to their inevitable places on the best-seller lists (or perhaps even before). Indeed, many of the characters appear to be modeled to attract the A-list stars most likely to turn the story into big box office. As literature, these books are produced for people on the go, and are designed to be read between subway stops or umbrella drinks on the beach. They are breezy, they use short sentences and small words, and the sexual deviancy that seems always to be an inextricable element of the plot is inevitably crude and salacious. I confess to having indulged in the guilty pleasure of spending time with these novels.

Blood Memory is a different "read". The only formula it follows is having a beginning, a middle, and an end. While the characters have their various virtues and vices that are important to the context of the story and the flow of its plot, they also tend to be multidimensional and interesting. While it partakes of elements of both, this book is far less a police procedural than it is an exploration of psychopathology. The story goes in some unexpected places, and the author is skilled in foreshadowing his plot developments in a subtle way that lets the reader anticipate the turning points just slightly ahead of the characters. This is both difficult to accomplish and very satisfying for the reader.

Another bright attribute is the use of language. The author is skilled both in description and in the development of the interior monologue that contributes to the reader's appreciation of the conflicts and complexity of its central character.

I recommend this book for those who want to experience the joys of reading without the guilt that accompanies the expenditure of time on so much of what passes for popular fiction these days.

7 of 7 found the following review helpful:

5An entertaining thriller about child abuse? YES!!!!!!Mar 30, 2005
By John Daley
Greg Iles is one of my favorite authors. His last two books have really disappointed me though. 'Sleep No More' was about souls switching bodies, and 'Footprints Of God' was just a boring Dan Brown rip-off. So when I heard the plot for 'Blood Memory' I was a bit leary. A thriller about child abuse? Iles actually pulls it off though. Blood Memory is the best book I've read this year. It is more than just a thriller, it reads like "To Kill A Mockingbird'. A fantastic portrait of life in the south. Iles characters jump off the page like they are real people living in Natchez, Mississippi right now. Buy this book, you will not regret it.

6 of 6 found the following review helpful:

4A close-to-perfect thrillerMar 10, 2005
By Craig
While Iles' books always make for a good read, he may have written his best yet with this one.

Iles manages to pull off a task with which many male writers have problems - writing from the point of view of a woman, in this case Cat Ferry, a vulnerable and likable character. While she's likable, she's also very human in her thoughts and actions, not a superwoman like too many fictional characters.

While the plot includes a serial killer in New Orleans, the book is really about Cat's past and her attempt to get past those events. Of course, this past eventually ties in somewhat to the present, but Cat is really the focus, far more than the murders. There's plenty of action and mystery, and Iles keeps the reader hanging for most of the book.

Thrillers are a dime a dozen, but excellent ones like this are far more rare. An excellent novel, one that will have most readers rushing to get to the end.

See all 148 customer reviews on Amazon.com
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