Tuesday, October 14, 2025

Review: Sharp Force

Sharp Force Sharp Force by Patricia Cornwell
My rating: 4 of 5 stars




3.5 Stars

With a strong and eerie start that boded well for this novel, we get to the middle, which seemed repetitive and a bit boring. Oh, there were some exciting parts, but not enough of them. This book dealt mainly with personal issues and not the crime.

We don't really have more than one suspect for these murders, and in the end, we get a big surprise with another suspect being pulled out of thin air.

One thing that bothered me is that when an author is going to use initials for something, they should make sure that the meaning is in the Kindle Dictionary. I hate having to pull myself out of the story to go to a computer to look something up. Not everyone knows what these acronyms mean.

*ARC was supplied by the publisher Grand Central Publishing/Hachette Book Group, the author, and NetGalley.



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Summary: "A serial killer terrorizes Northern Virginia, his ability to come and go baffling those pursuing him with zero success.

He disables the victims' WIFI, attacking them in bed, the cause of death exsanguination due to sharp force injuries.

This has been going on for six months when Dr. Kay Scarpetta is awakened by her phone in the early morning hours of June 12, her birthday. She's informed that the Phantom Slasher has struck again, only this time there are two victims, and one of them has survived, the scene Mercy Island and its notorious old psychiatric hospital. This is a modern ghost story, a ghastly apparition seen around the time the Slasher strikes in each case. The same figure in black is spotted levitating through the fog, and the technical explanation is one that's of keen interest to the CIA, even the White House.

It's up to Scarpetta to stop the Phantom Slasher before they strike again and vanish, leaving another trail of blood in their wake.

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