
Fatal Voyage
Temperance Brennan Series, Book 4
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- نقد و بررسی
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نقد و بررسی

Serious and no-nonsense, Dr. Temperance Brennan is keenly captured in this latest Reichs thriller. Keeping her voice calm and methodical, Katherine Borowitz delivers this first-person narrative in step with the protagonist's professionally composed demeanor. Dr. Brennan, who is rarely ruffled by the horrific findings of her job, is characterized in an orderly manner, much the same way that the forensic investigation and scientific procedures are outlined. This chilling tale of malevolence is revealed slowly and meticulously as the investigation is detailed. Though somewhat gory and gruesome, it's a great listen for Tempe Brennan fans. D.L.M. (c) AudioFile 2001, Portland, Maine

August 6, 2001
Called in to investigate a horrific North Carolina airplane crash, forensic anthropologist Temperance Brennan (Tempe to her friends) finds that the bodies of the 88 young people on board have become inexplicably mixed up with evidence of an older crime—and gets fired. It turns out a local politician has a vested interest to protect. Although Tempe deals with the details of death every working day, neither she nor her creator, real-life forensic scientist and university professor Kathy Reichs (Deadly Decisions, etc.) ever exploit those details for morbidity or melodrama. That restraint, rendered superbly by understated reader Borowitz and combined with a riveting plot, makes for a terrific audio package—exciting and intelligent entertainment. Borowitz is perfectly cast as the 50-ish Brennan: wise, self-deprecating and funny. Simultaneous release with Scribner hardcover (Forecasts, May 21).

May 21, 2001
With four crime thrillers to her name, Reichs (Deadly Decisions) seems to have settled into a comfortable routine with forensic anthropologist Temperance Brennan, whose adventures grow more engrossing with each outing. Here, Tempe takes on an especially gruesome case in a richly plotted tale about an airline crash, missing body parts and cannibalism. The story opens in the rugged backwoods of North Carolina, where Tempe must identify the dead from the remains of a passenger jet that spiraled straight into the ground. While rummaging through the grisly debris, she comes across a foot that doesn't appear to match any of the 88 dead people aboard the jet. As investigators determine what brought the plane down, Tempe looks into the mystery of the foot. That seemingly well-intentioned pursuit gets her fired. Her ouster appears to be the doing of Lt. Gov. Parker Davenport, an ambitious politician taking an abnormal interest in the crash. Tempe, determined to restore her reputation, plows back into the case on the sly. What she finds is evidence of a chilling, depraved episode in local history that upends many common perceptions about North Carolina's political and business elite. Reichs, herself a highly accomplished forensic anthropologist, expertly directs a busy plot that moves with electrical force in the final quarter. She capitalizes on the morbid yet captivating aspects of the forensic trenchwork, yet never lets it overwhelm her story. But it is Reichs's ongoing development of Tempe—a woman in her 50s with a mature understanding of human nature, and a self-deprecating sense of humor—that truly lifts the book above many of its peers.

This plane-crash whodunit written by a forensic anthropologist is chock full of information about blood samples, DNA-matching, bone fragments, and conversations revolving around expensive scientific equipment. Some of it works, but most of it doesn't. Narrator Kate Harper gets off to an abysmally slow start with pacing, characterization, and, at times, basic reading. She improves as the book progresses but never reaches a point where she grabs us and makes us want to learn more. To be fair, Harper has mediocre material to work with, and her husky voice has great emotional range and a fine sense of humor. R.I.G. (c) AudioFile 2003, Portland, Maine
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