![]() ![]() Not only that, but the FBI has taken an interest in the case, but won’t give her any information as to why – and Agent Gabriel Dean has an unsettling effect on the normally reserved Rizzoli… ![]() When the Surgeon escapes not long afterwards, Rizzoli finds herself the unwilling focus of his attention. But when she is called to a crime scene that bears eerie similarities to the Surgeon’s work, she cannot help but go, only to find that she is hunting yet another monster, one who may be in touch with the Surgeon himself. ![]() Rizzoli is still recovering from the capture of the Surgeon the previous year, during which she was attacked and injured by him. She does seem truly comfortable with Isles’s voice and I suspect this is the viewpoint she will continue to use.) (Incidentally, I find it interesting how Gerritsen has moved the main viewpoint from person to person throughout the series, from Moore to Rizzoli and finally to Dr Maura Isles, whose viewpoint she has used in The Sinner, Body Double, Vanish and The Mephisto Club. Instead of following Detective Thomas Moore, who is now married to Catherine Corday and holidaying in London, we now see things through the eyes of his former partner, Jane Rizzoli. ![]() The Apprentice begins the year after the events described in The Surgeon. Spoilers for The Surgeon below… proceed at your own risk! If you haven’t yet read The Surgeon, put The Apprentice down and go away and read it first. The Apprenticeis the second in Tess Gerritsen’s sequence of crime novels which started with The Surgeon. ![]()
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