Friday, July 29, 2011

Whiplash by Catherine Coulter


From Barnes and Noble:
Coulter was trying to take on somethine big in this book. She didn't quite get there for me. I think it's because she is now consistently putting two different plots in the same book. I think that the drug angle was a bit too much for a half of a book.
Yale professor Dr. Edward Kender’s father is undergoing chemotherapy when the supply of a critical accompanying drug, Culovort, suddenly runs out. Unwilling to accept the drug manufacturer’s disingenuous excuse of production line problems, Dr. Kender hires private investigator Erin Pulaski to prove that something more sinister is going on at Schiffer Hartwin.
Meanwhile, in Maryland, married FBI agents Lacey Sherlock and Dillon Savich are investigating a rather unusual case: Senator David Hoffman is experiencing a ghostly apparition with possible malicious intent. The case is baffling, and Sherlock and Savich are not sure what to believe, even after witnessing the disturbing specter for themselves. They’re no closer to cracking the case when a call comes in from Connecticut: A top foreign Schiffer Hartwin employee has been found murdered behind the drug company’s U.S. headquarters.
Unbeknownst to the FBI, Erin Pulaski had uncovered a bombshell in her investigation: The Culovort shortage is set to bring in a windfall profit in excess of two billion dollars. Upon learning of the murder, Erin is certain it has something to do with her findings, but she risks exposing herself by coming forward. As the feds move in, the case becomes even more complicated for Erin, since the murder of a foreign national on federal land can mean only that the pharmaceutical house has a secret of epic proportions — one it would do anything to keep hidden.

I also didn't like how she put so much in the plot with the senator for it to just flop. That's how it felt to me. It's like she started with this whole elaborate other-worldly story and then she just let it drop by using a lame excuse.
It took me a long time to read this series, and I'm glad that they it's over for now. I may come back to Coulter at some time, but I can say that she's not really one of my favorites.

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