$7.99 

Want this eBook?

Our Reader™ software is required to purchase and download eBooks. Download it here.Click here to purchase this book!

The price of this eBook was set by Random House Digital Inc.

The Surgeon: Enhanced eBook Edition

Overview

In her most masterful novel of medical suspense, New York Times bestselling author Tess Gerritsen creates a villain of unforgettable evil--and the one woman who can catch him before he kills again.He slips into their homes at night and walks silently into bedrooms where women lie sleeping, unaware of the horrors they soon will endure. The precision of the killer's methods suggests he is a deranged man of medicine, propelling the Boston newspapers and the frightened public to name him "The Surgeon."The cops' only clue rests with another surgeon, the victim of a nearly identical crime. Two years ago, Dr. Catherine Cordell fought back and killed her attacker before he could complete his assault. Now she hides her fears of intimacy behind a cool and elegant exterior and a well-earned reputation as a top trauma surgeon.

*The enhanced ebook includes a new cover, original essays from Tess Gerritsen about the inspiration for her characters Jane Rizzoli and Maura Isles, and an excerpt from her upcoming thriller, Ice Cold.

Awards

  • RITA Award

Author Information

Tess Gerritsen

Tess Gerritsen is a physician and an internationally bestselling author. She gained nationwide acclaim for her first novel of medical suspense, the New York Times bestseller Harvest. She is also the author of the bestsellers The Keepsake, The Bone Garden, The Mephisto Club, Vanish, Body Double, The Sinner, The Apprentice, The Surgeon, Life Support, Bloodstream, and Gravity. Tess Gerritsen lives in Maine.

Editorial Reviews

A creepy cerebral serial killer vaguely reminiscent of Hannibal Lecter pursues a charismatic female doctor in this thoroughly satisfying if somewhat derivative thriller. Skillfully drawn surgical backdrops sizzling with ER intensity balance out the obligatory romantic intrigue and familiar plucky police professionals, attesting to Gerritsen's authentic medical expertise as a former physician. Dr. Catherine Cordell, the main character in this chilling tale, thought she had shot and killed her rapist and would-be murderer two years earlier in steamy Savannah, where he was a surgery intern at her hospital. Now, in Boston, as another hot summer begins, he appears to have iraculously returned and embarked once again on his grisly mission: he rapes women, then surgically removes their wombs. As two intrepid detectives Thomas Moore and Jane Rizzoli investigate, Cordell begins to doubt her own memories (or lack of) and discovers that not even her OR is safe. Gliding as smoothly as a scalpel in a confident surgeon's hand, this tale proves that Gerritsen (Harvest; Life Support; Bloodstream; Gravity), originally a romance writer, has morphed into a dependable suspense novelist whose growing popularity is keeping pace with her ever-finer writing skills. (Sept.) Forecast: National print advertising in People, the New York Times and USA Today, plus a major promotion campaign, will ratchet Gerritsen's sales up yet another notch. Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information. -- PUBLISHERS WEEKLY.

Customer Reviews

0345447840

Showing 1-10 of the 27 most recent reviews

  • 1.3 stars out of 5Review from
    GoodReads is a social reading site where members can share and review the books they're reading

    Posted April 13, 2012 by ,

  • 2.4 stars out of 5Review from
    GoodReads is a social reading site where members can share and review the books they're reading

    Posted February 29, 2012 by , Dallas, TX

  • 3.4 stars out of 5Review from
    GoodReads is a social reading site where members can share and review the books they're reading

    Posted December 16, 2011 by , Ashford, F2, The United Kingdom

  • 4.3 stars out of 5Review from
    GoodReads is a social reading site where members can share and review the books they're reading

    Posted October 05, 2011 by , Columbus, OH

  • 5.4 stars out of 5Review from
    GoodReads is a social reading site where members can share and review the books they're reading

    Posted October 02, 2011 by , Brookfield, IL

  • 6.2 stars out of 5Review from
    GoodReads is a social reading site where members can share and review the books they're reading

    Posted July 18, 2011 by , Cardiff, The United Kingdom

  • 7.4 stars out of 5Review from
    GoodReads is a social reading site where members can share and review the books they're reading

    Posted April 24, 2011 by , Sydney, 02, Australia

  • 8.3 stars out of 5Review from
    GoodReads is a social reading site where members can share and review the books they're reading

    Posted April 05, 2011 by , Columbia, MO

  • 9.4 stars out of 5A good thriller

    Posted April 02, 2011 by PM, Denver

    It was a good read and moved well. I like how it built to the ending which was very chilling. Found it very infomative about Rizzoli and the background of her life. will read others in the series
  • 10.5 stars out of 5Review from
    GoodReads is a social reading site where members can share and review the books they're reading

    Posted February 28, 2011 by , Marcus Hook, PA

  1. Previous 
  2. Next
  1. Previous 
  2. Next

Product Details

  • Published by

    Ballantine Books

  • Publish Date

    July 30, 2002 

  • Print ISBN

    0345447840

  • eBook ISBN

    9780345449436

  • Imprint

    Ballantine Books

  • Filesize

    852.95 KB

  • Number of Print Pages*

    368

* Number of eBook pages may differ. Click here for more information.

Excerpt from The Surgeon by Tess Gerritsen

One year later Detective Thomas Moore disliked the smell of latex, and as he snapped on the gloves, releasing a puff of talcum, he felt the usual twinge of anticipatory nausea. The odor was linked to the most unpleasant aspects of his job, and like one of Pavlov's dogs, trained to salivate on cue, he'd come to associate that rubbery scent with the inevitable accompaniment of blood and body fluids. An olfactory warning to brace himself.

And so he did, as he stood outside the autopsy room. He had walked in straight from the heat, and already sweat was chilling on his skin. It was July 12, a humid and hazy Friday afternoon. Across the city of Boston, air conditioners rattled and dripped, and tempers were flaring. On the Tobin Bridge, cars would already be backed up, fleeing north to the cool forests of Maine. But Moore would not be among them. He had been called back from his vacation, to view a horror he had no wish to confront.

He was already garbed in a surgical gown, which he'd pulled from the morgue linen cart. Now he put on a paper cap to catch stray hairs and pulled paper booties over his shoes, because he had seen what sometimes spilled from the table onto the floor. The blood, the clumps of tissue. He was by no means a tidy man, but he had no wish to bring any trace of the autopsy room home on his shoes. He paused for a few seconds outside the door and took a deep breath. Then, resigning himself to the ordeal, he pushed into the room.

The draped corpse lay on the table-a woman, by the shape of it. Moore avoided looking too long at the victim and focused instead on the living people in the room. Dr. Ashford Tierney, the Medical Examiner, and a morgue attendant were assembling instruments on a tray. Across the table from Moore stood Jane Rizzoli, also from the Boston Homicide Unit. Thirty-three years old, Rizzoli was a small and square-jawed woman. Her untamable curls were hidden beneath the paper O.R. cap, and without her black hair to soften her features, her face seemed to be all hard angles, her dark eyes probing and intense. She had transferred to Homicide from Vice and Narcotics six months ago. She was the only woman in the homicide unit, and already there had been problems between her and another detective, charges of sexual harassment, countercharges of unrelenting bitchiness. Moore was not sure he liked Rizzoli, or she him. So far they had kept their interactions strictly business, and he thought she preferred it that way.