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!! Free PDF Isle of Dogs (Andy Brazil), by Patricia Cornwell

Free PDF Isle of Dogs (Andy Brazil), by Patricia Cornwell

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Isle of Dogs (Andy Brazil), by Patricia Cornwell

Isle of Dogs (Andy Brazil), by Patricia Cornwell



Isle of Dogs (Andy Brazil), by Patricia Cornwell

Free PDF Isle of Dogs (Andy Brazil), by Patricia Cornwell

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Isle of Dogs (Andy Brazil), by Patricia Cornwell

Patricia Cornwell’s novels of big-city police have taken this classic genre to a new level. Now, with this #1 New York Times bestselling novel, she outdoes herself, with a wry tale of life and turmoil behind the blue wall.

Chaos breaks loose when the governor of Virginia orders that speed traps be painted on all streets and highways, and warns that speeders will be caught by monitoring aircraft flying overhead. But the eccentric island of Tangier, fourteen miles off the coast of Virginia in Chesapeake Bay, responds by declaring war on its own state. Judy Hammer, newly installed as the superintendent of the Virginia State Police, and Andy Brazil, a state trooper and Hammer’s right hand and confidant, find themselves at their wits’ end as they try to protect the public from the politicians—and vice versa—in this pitch-perfect, darkly comic romp.

  • Sales Rank: #1150488 in Books
  • Brand: Berkley
  • Published on: 2002-10-01
  • Released on: 2002-10-01
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 6.81" h x 1.18" w x 4.30" l, .45 pounds
  • Binding: Mass Market Paperback
  • 432 pages
Features
  • Great product!

Amazon.com Review
Be aware: this is not your typical Patricia Cornwell novel. Not only is there no Kay Scarpetta, but Isle of Dogs is a comic romp, a real departure for this author. It does center around a couple of characters from past books--police chief Judy Hammer and reporter-turned-cop Andy Brazil of Hornet's Nest and Southern Cross. But the plot, style, and tone will remind you more of Carl Hiaasen's dark comedies.

The madcap doings get underway when the addled, nearly blind governor of Virginia confusedly launches a speed-trap program on isolated Tangier Island, whose prickly, eccentric residents promptly attempt secession. Cornwell adeptly interweaves other crisscrossing plot lines involving a gang of street-stupid thugs gunning for Hammer and Brazil, an angel-faced serial killer, a kidnapped dog, and more. She does miss a few beats: the pacing sags during certain episodes, and at times the writing strains so hard for laughs that instead it draws winces. Nonetheless, Isle of Dogs is for the most part a funny, diverting read and a refreshing departure for Cornwell. --Nicholas H. Allison

From Library Journal
An island in Chesapeake Bay revolts when Virginia's governor orders speed traps on every street. It doesn't sound like Cornwell, but it's a main selection of BOMC, the Literary GuildR, the Mystery GuildR, and the Doubleday Book Club.
Copyright 2001 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Review
“Move over Carl Hiaasen, you’ve got company. Patricia Cornwell has switched to Hiaasen’s world of black humor and nearly conquers it.”—San Francisco Examiner

 

“Cornwell has coined a new penny.”—USA Today

 

Most helpful customer reviews

57 of 61 people found the following review helpful.
Stupid. I'm sorry, there's just no other word.
By A Customer
It's hard to believe that the creator of Kay Scarpetta wrote this. The humor is lowbrow, the situations and characters are crass and unbelievable, the plot is weak. Cornwell's created a universe where everyone is on the decline, or never got high enough to have a decline. They are ugly, stupid and rotten except for the shrinking Hammer and the irritating Brazil. It's tough to read a book where literally every piece of action requires someone to be incredibly stupid. It's beyond farce, it's even beyond slapstick. It's just stupid. If this book were written by anyone other than Cornwell it would never have been published.

29 of 29 people found the following review helpful.
The Reviewers Are Slandering Carl Hiaasen
By Susan A. Neff
This is really bad. Really bad. Bad, bad novel. I gave it one star because there aren't any negative stars in the reviewers' pull-down menu. Thank goodness I got it for 20 cents as a book-club enrollment offer. But I wish I'd selected the tote bag instead.
This book establishes that Cornwell will have to write off any thought of ever using Judy Hammer and Andy Brazil as serious characters again. They deserved better, despite being weak creations to begin with. They could have developed into an ordinary, somewhat likeable crew for a police-procedural series. Instead, they're well on their way to becoming shallow and ludicrous cardboard cutouts.
Poor Andy, who began life as a somewhat competent journalist, becomes a masked-crusader Web author -- Trooper Truth -- with a badly-conceived public-service mission. Chapters of the novel are interspersed with truly dreadful Trooper Truth columns, rambling, badly-written, poorly-researched, lurid, condescending pieces indeed. If my eighth-grade grandson ever wrote a history paper as truly stupid as Trooper Truth's lesson on mummies, I'd have him in summer school until he turned 35. Judy Hammer also fares badly, and a particularly labored subplot about her kidnapped dog makes her silly rather than sympathetic.
Obviously, the author has no understanding of the culture of Tangier Island -- having used it as a contagion site in an earlier Scarpetta novel, she should have left it alone thereafter. Instead, she recycles her left-over notes on the location and performs an all-out and somewhat ugly lampoon this time out. And she doesn't do the Commonwealth of Virginia any great service, either, creating a dotty, half-blind governor who is so one-dimensionally absurd that he fails as a caracature and seems to exist solely as a vehicle for potty jokes. Even Mr. Magoo was loveable. Hiassen's Skink is a classic example of the Wise Fool. Governor Crimm is a whining oaf and his family and advisors are weak adolescent humor at its tasteless nadir -- not even good satire.
If Cornwell is trying to duplicate Carl Hiaasen's deft satirical scalpel, she'd be better off abandoning the attempt; the reader can balance Hiaasen's concern for the fragile Florida environment against his dislike for the developers and tourists who exploit it. Cornwell apparently neither loves Virginia nor its law-enforcement workers and is determined to milk everything in sight for cheap laughs. There's no cerebral humor here -- just school-yard slapstick that's far too fragile to sustain a full-length novel.
It's bad enough that each successive Kay Scarpetta novel becomes more issue-driven, losing ground to the vastly better-delivered work of Kathy Reichs. Isle of Dogs gives every indication of having been tossed off as an easy way to finance Cornwell's rather peculiar and self-congratulatory Jack the Ripper research trip. It's a shame when authors start believing their own reviews and decide that their fans will, sheeplike, cherish everything that falls from their word processors. One has to wonder what Cornwell's editor was thinking of; usually, edotors try to make their best-selling authors look good even in their weaker moments. Is it possible that we have a case of an imperious, arrogant author who has cheesed off her publishers enough that they're letting her readers see what she's really like?
No, next time, definitely the tote bag.

33 of 34 people found the following review helpful.
Perhaps "Dog of Dogs" would be more apt
By A Customer
"Madcap" can only be used as a description of this mess if you throw an "r" in between the c and the a. Literally. For...what's that sound? Ah, the scraping of the bottom of the barrel, herein represented by the author's continual use of bowel humor.
I'm an avid Cornwell reader who feels ripped off by this throw away effort. Even if you totally unhook your reality tethers, this book is STILL moronic. The premise is lame, the characters unbelievable and annoying at best, but more often teeth-grindingly obnoxious.
If any reader can honestly say that even one snippet of this book works for them, I've got a bridge available to sell you. From the supposed governor of Virginia, on down through various political figures and appointees, right through to the heroine (who acts like she's ON heroin) and the namby-pamby twirp Andy AKA Trooper Truth -- ack! I'm just riling myself up for no good reason. If you must have this, wait a month and snag it out of the bargin bin.
Not to rant, but I'm noticing a disturbing theme of brand-name authors crossing genre to rake in the big bucks at the expense of their loyal book buying public - Patterson, Grisham, Baldacci, et al.
Nope, I certainly don't mind change, and appreciate how difficult it must be for an author to keep going back to the well for fresh ideas. Isle of Dogs, however, feels as though Cornwell picked "screwball comedy" out of a grab bag of plot ideas at the best-selling-author Christmas party last year.
What's next? Lou Boldt's Favorite Recipes by Ridley Pearson? Sue Grafton shoving Kinsey Milhone into a rousing pirate-infested romance novel? (Q is for Quartermaine?) Ack...I digress.
Plain and simple. Want a funny detective book? Buy anything by Janet Evanovich. Want suspense? Try Linda Fairstein's The Dead House. Want to feel like you wasted your money? Buy this.

See all 808 customer reviews...

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