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The sinner Cover Image E-book E-book

The sinner

Gerritsen, Tess. (Author).

Record details

  • ISBN: 9780345464453 (electronic bk. : Adobe Reader)
  • ISBN: 0345464451 (electronic bk. : Adobe Reader)
  • ISBN: 9780345464453 (electronic bk. : Mobipocket Reader)
  • ISBN: 0345464451 (electronic bk. : Mobipocket Reader)
  • Physical Description: electronic resource
    remote
    342 p. ; 25 cm.
  • Edition: 1st ed.
  • Publisher: New York : Ballantine Books, c2003.

Content descriptions

Reproduction Note:
Electronic reproduction. New York : Random House Pub. Group, 2003. Requires Adobe Digital Editions (file size: 1122 KB) or Mobipocket Reader (file size: 379 KB).
Subject: Rizzoli, Jane, Detective (Fictitious character) -- Fiction
Police -- Massachusetts -- Boston -- Fiction
Medical examiners (Law) -- Fiction
Nuns -- Crimes against -- Fiction
Forensic pathologists -- Fiction
Women physicians -- Fiction
Boston (Mass.) -- Fiction
Policewomen -- Fiction
Genre: Electronic books.
Mystery fiction.

Electronic resources


  • Booklist Reviews : Booklist Reviews 2003 June #1
    When two Boston nuns are found brutally beaten--one fatally and one with a scintilla of life left in her--it's up to homicide detective Jane Rizzoli to find the perpetrator. Medical examiner Dr. Maura Isles, nicknamed the Queen of the Dead, has the unlucky fortune to discover that the murdered nun, a young woman about to make her final vows, hid untold secrets from the rest of the aging convent. Both fallen Catholics, Rizzoli and Isles seek to reconcile the viciousness of the crimes with the seeming blind faith of the victims. Another dead body turns up, and the investigators must rely on their clinical analysis, lest they be sucked in to the drama unfolding before them. Each woman immerses herself in her work rather than face the outside world; Rizzoli refuses to face the truth of what her future holds, and Isles denies her own loneliness. Woven within the horror of this gruesome story is the old allegory of good versus evil, but by relating it through these two fascinating individuals, Gerritsen avoids cliches. Another captivating, horrific thriller in her extremely popular canon. ((Reviewed June 1 & 15, 2003)) Copyright 2003 Booklist Reviews
  • Kirkus Reviews : Kirkus Reviews 2003 June #2
    All her pages suffused purple from lividity, Doc Gerritsen's morgue slab awaits you, reader.Brilliantly, Gerritsen (The Apprentice, 2002, etc.) has her regular Boston Homicide Detective Jane Rizzoli play second lead to Medical Examiner Maura Isles, known as the Queen of the Dead, who autopsies all of Jane's vics and supplies more deliciously grisly pages this time than in Gerritsen's last two outings combined. While Rizzoli handles the crimes, Dr. Isles delivers arias on death and the sweet hell of human existence. And as much of this plays out against the frozen stones of Graystones Abbey-a nunnery where a youthful nun lies battered to death and an aged nun, also battered, is dying-as under Isles's examining scalpel and X-ray photos of crushed skulls and bullet fragments scattered about a vic's sternum. But Isles and Rizzoli are enmeshed and struggling as well with richly detailed love lives that have the reader suffering right along with the two leads, with Isles panting after her world-hopping divorced saint of a doctor-husband and Rizzoli fighting her lust for the FBI agent she bedded in The Apprentice-something she must pay for now. Autopsy reveals that the dead young nun had just given birth (no one knew she was pregnant) before being murdered in the midnight chapel. Where's the baby? Another murder pops up in a deserted Italian restaurant: a woman with her hands and feet removed and her face stripped off. Why her feet? Or her face? Now, that's enough. "A place of death has a power all its own. Long after the body is removed and the blood scrubbed away, such a place still retains the memory of what has happened there. It holds echoes of screams, the lingering scent of fear. And like a black hole, it sucks into its vortex the rapt attention of the living, who cannot turn away, cannot resist a glimpse into hell."Glorious deaths bursting with the guilty glow of sex.Author tour Copyright Kirkus 2003 Kirkus/BPI Communications.All rights reserved
  • Library Journal Reviews : LJ Reviews 2003 April #1
    One by one, three nuns are gruesomely murdered in a cloistered convent, and it's up to medical examiner Maura Isles and homicide detective Jane Rizzoli to discover why. Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.
  • Library Journal Reviews : LJ Reviews July #1
    Internist-turned-author Gerritsen returns with her sixth medical thriller (after The Apprentice), bringing back Boston detective Jane Rizzoli. This time out the victims are two nuns-young (and recently pregnant) Sister Camille, beaten to death in the chapel, and elderly Sister Ursula, who is left clinging to life nearby. Medical examiner Maura Isles is brought in to investigate, and she and Rizzoli team up against a case of seemingly biblical proportions, which includes Camille's mysterious pregnancy, leper colonies in India, and unexplained plagues. All of this mayhem swirls around a backdrop of Maura's problems with her charismatic ex-husband and Rizzoli's unexpected pregnancy, which make for a stew that doesn't quite cook and that is spiced with some turgid metaphors: "like a black hole, [the murder scene] sucks into its vortex the rapt attention of the living, who cannot turn away, cannot resist a glimpse into hell." But the plot moves quickly, and there's enough suspense here to warrant a slot on the beach reading list, perhaps along with something by Alex Quaver. Recommended. [Previewed in Prepub Alert, LJ 4/1/03.]-Rebecca House Stankowski, Purdue Univ. Calumet Lib., Hammond, IN Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.
  • Publishers Weekly Reviews : PW Review 2003 July #2
    A grisly murder at a convent baffles Medical Examiner Maura Isles and Det. Jane Rizzoli at the start of this assured, richly shaded seventh novel from bestseller Gerritsen (The Apprentice; The Surgeon, etc.). The popular duo are called to Boston's Graystones Abbey when two nuns are discovered in an abandoned chapel, one dead and the other near death, both brutally bludgeoned. Red herrings are everywhere: Isles's discovery that one of the murdered nuns had recently given birth (followed shortly by the discovery of the baby's body in a pond near the convent); the murder of a homeless derelict with her face and extremities removed by her killer; and the lurking menace of a multinational chemical company. Complicating matters further is the sudden arrival of Isles's ex-husband, Victor, a celebrity humanitarian with his own suspicious connection to the case, and Rizzoli's old flame, FBI agent Gabriel Dean, who's responsible for the baby now growing in Rizzoli's belly. The investigation is rather low-key, but Gerritsen gives atmospheric depth to her tale with descriptions of snowbound Boston and an exotic past tragedy. Isles's pleasantly bitchy coldness ("Go ahead and pass me, idiots. I've met too many drivers like you on my slab") gives a welcome edge to the proceedings, and the struggles of both Isles and Rizzoli to balance their tough professional acts with romantic drama are satisfyingly gritty. BOMC main selection; 6-city author tour. (Aug. 19) Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.
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