The Past Tense (Diagnosis Murder Series #5) by Lee Goldberg: Book Cover

    The Past Tense (Diagnosis Murder Series #5) by Lee Goldberg

    BUY IT NEW

    • Limited Time Offer! Everyone receives the Member Price on books.
      See Details
    • This item is currently out of stock.
    • Add To List uiAction=GetAllLists&page=List&pageType=list&ean=9780451216144&productCode=BK&maxCount=100&threshold=3

    BUY IT USED

    16 copies from $2.72

    See All Available

    (Mass Market Paperback)

    • Pub. Date: August 2005
    • 256pp
      Buy it Used: 16 copies from $2.72 See All Available
       
      • Overview
      • Customer Reviews

      Product Details

      • Pub. Date: August 2005
      • Publisher: Penguin Group (USA)
      • Format: Mass Market Paperback, 256pp

      Customer Reviews

      • Reader Rating:
      • Ratings: 2Reviews: 1

      very exciting and complicated mysteryby harstan

      Reader Rating:
      See Detailed Ratings

      June 04, 2005: In Los Angeles, rain has made the area a flood stricken mud hole and when Dr. Mark Sloan walks along the beach he is shocked to find a dead woman in a mermaid?s costume near his home. When he goes to work at Community General Hospital, his friend and medical examiner Dr Amanda Bentley tells him that the victim was injected with a drug to induce paralysis and in her stomach was a memory card. --- When they get it developed, it is a picture of a storm that happened in 1962 forty-three years ago in the same month. The killer is sending Mark a message because that storm began the events that led to Mark solving his first homicide. Five student nurses were killed because they were involved in a blackmail scheme headed by a doctor who was also murdered. The woman who was killed turns out to be the daughter of a patient he treated the night it all began in 1962. Mark is determined to find the killer who seems to enjoy taunting him even if it means putting his own life in danger. --- Lee Goldberg is a very visual writer so each scene comes alive in the mind of the reader, almost as of this were actually watching an episode of the television show. The author is great at creating characters that are three dimensional and life like and he sets up the who-done-in such a way so that almost anyone could be the killer. Readers will thoroughly enjoy this very exciting and complicated mystery. --- Harriet Klausner