Kay Scarpetta and her colleagues-Benton Wesley, Pete Marino, and her niece Lucy Farinelli-return to a series of forensic cases as haunting as any they have ever tackled. Working with the National Forensic Institute in Florida, Scarpetta and Marino examine the X-rays of a man who has died from a shotgun blast to the chest. But the pellets embedded show a strange 'pinball' pattern and the two can't help but wonder if this points to suicide-or to murder. REUPLOAD NEEDED
Added by: Maria | Karma: 3098.81 | Fiction literature, Audio, Audiobooks | 11 July 2008
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"Somewhere," muses Noah Calhoun, while sitting on his porch in the moonight, "there were people making love." The Notebook, a Southern-fried story of love-lost-and-found-again, revolves around a single time-honored romantic dilemma: will beautiful Allison Nelson stay with Mr. Respectability (to whom she happens to be engaged), or will she choose Noah, the romantic rascal she left so many years ago?
John Perry did two things on his 75th birthday. First he visited his wife’s grave. Then he joined the army.
The
good news is that humanity finally made it into interstellar space. The
bad news is that planets fit to live on are scarce—and alien races
willing to fight us for them are common. So: we fight. To defend Earth,
and to stake our own claim to planetary real estate. Far from Earth,
the war has been going on for decades: brutal, bloody, unyielding.
Scalzi has imagined an interesting universe and there are a lot of
intense action sequences balanced by thoughful, nuanced passages. The
book also has a lot of clever, salty dialogue between the soldiers that
is often quite funny.
Nick Shay and Klara Sax knew each other once, intimately, and they
meet again in the American desert. He is trying to outdistance the
crucial events of his early life; she is an artist who has made a blood
struggle for independence.
Underworld is a story of men
and women together and apart, seen in deep, clear detail and in
stadium-sized panoramas, shadowed throughout by the overarching
conflict of the Cold War. It is a novel that accepts every challenge of
these extraordinary times -- Don DeLillo's greatest and most powerful
work of fiction.