Tess Gerritsen Fans discussion
Medical Thrillers (stand-alone)
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The Bone Garden
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Right - Maura Isles has a minor role in the book :-) It was like a cameo appearance, but she isn't one of the main characters. Can't wait to re-read this! Are you interested in re-reading Laura or Emily? Think about it okay? Okay. Thanks.

Roxy wrote: "I enjoyed this book too. It is what introduced me to Tess Gerritsen. I loved the flip-flopping between two time periods."
Want to re-read it with us? :-) Think about it.
Want to re-read it with us? :-) Think about it.


That's okay Roxy & Laura - Maybe next time :-)
The Bone Garden is waiting for me at the library :-)
The Bone Garden is waiting for me at the library :-)

message 12:
by
Dustin the wind Crazy little brown owl, Colorful Colorado
(last edited Mar 13, 2011 11:34AM)
(new)
We read ICE COLD last Summer when it was a new release, but you are welcome to comment in the ICE COLD thread. The thread might not always show up on the group homepage because only the 5 threads with most recent activity in each folder are shown. Here is a direct link:
http://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/2...
http://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/2...

OK, so I have finished Ice Cold and posted my thoughts and comments on the respective thread and now I am on to Bone Garden. If this one is anything like the last one I just finished I had better do the laundry first because I didn't take the time to do anything while I was reading Ice Cold. Loved that book!







Hey Dustin Crazy,
While I was reading Bone Garden I was thinking that it was good but didn't understand the hype or how it could be a favorite. It was interesting and I like to read about events from the past weather they are fact or fiction. BUT when I got to the end of the book I CRIED. The last few chapters were heart wrenching.
*********SPOILER***************
Norris dying without knowing the truth about his childhood, who his father was, what happened to his mother, that his friend was really his cousin. Rose, having to live life alone with only fading memories of what was and dreams of what could have been. It was a very good read!
I'm getting near the end. It makes me wonder how much is factual information. Tess always does a lot of research into her novels and I also feel like she puts a lot of herself into the story as well. It's easy to see the connection between the author's medical background and the medical history of the 1800's. It's also easy notice the "romance" aspect of Gerritsen's writing in The Bone Garden. Likewise, Tess put a lot of her studies to use in my personal favorite Rizzoli & Isles novel: The Keepsake. She talked about this on the interview contained on the Audio of Girl Missing.


I'm wondering if the info about O.W.H. and Charles mostly true. I guess I need to look into sometime. I think it's interesting that a medical doctor turned writer wrote about Doctors who also became Poets :-)

At the end of The Bone Garden doesn't she tell us what is true?
message 28:
by
Dustin the wind Crazy little brown owl, Colorful Colorado
(last edited Apr 12, 2011 09:15PM)
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I only had the audio version and I don't remember an afterword. I'll try to get a copy of the book from the library.

Helen wrote: "This is also my favourite stand alone book. I really felt I was walking down the old cobble streets! Brilliant book"
:-) You clearly have fine taste in literature.
:-) You clearly have fine taste in literature.

:-) You clearly have fine taste in literature."
:0) Thank you!! I do get a little engrossed in my books which is good, but bad when I start dreaming about being in them!!
Helen wrote: "I do get a little engrossed in my books which is good, but bad when I start dreaming about being in them!!"
Depends on the book and your character role. It could be very bad, in which case I'd call it a nightmare rather than a dream :-)
Depends on the book and your character role. It could be very bad, in which case I'd call it a nightmare rather than a dream :-)

AUTHOR'S NOTE (Found in the back of the book)
In March 1833, Oliver Wendell Holmes left Boston and sailed to France, where he would spend the next two years completing his medical studies. At the renowned Ecole de Medicine in Paris, young Holmes had access to an unlimited number of anatomical specimens, and he studied under some of the finest medical and scientific minds in the world. He returned to Boston a far more accomplished physician than most of his American peers.
In 1843, at the Boston Society for Medical Improvement, he presented a paper titled "The Contagiousness of Puerperal Fever." It would prove to be his greatest contribution to American medicine. It introduced a new practice that now seems obvious, but which, in Holmes's day, was a radical new idea. Countless lives were saved, and miseries avoided, by his simple yet revolutionary suggestion: that physicians should simply wash their hands.
-Tess Gerritsen
In March 1833, Oliver Wendell Holmes left Boston and sailed to France, where he would spend the next two years completing his medical studies. At the renowned Ecole de Medicine in Paris, young Holmes had access to an unlimited number of anatomical specimens, and he studied under some of the finest medical and scientific minds in the world. He returned to Boston a far more accomplished physician than most of his American peers.
In 1843, at the Boston Society for Medical Improvement, he presented a paper titled "The Contagiousness of Puerperal Fever." It would prove to be his greatest contribution to American medicine. It introduced a new practice that now seems obvious, but which, in Holmes's day, was a radical new idea. Countless lives were saved, and miseries avoided, by his simple yet revolutionary suggestion: that physicians should simply wash their hands.
-Tess Gerritsen

Recommended reading on human cadavers (I found it eye-opening):
Stiff: The Curious Lives of Human Cadavers by Mary Roach

Stiff: The Curious Lives of Human Cadavers by Mary Roach
Books mentioned in this topic
Stiff: The Curious Lives of Human Cadavers (other topics)The Bone Garden (other topics)
The Keepsake (other topics)
The Bone Garden (other topics)
The Bone Garden (other topics)
Authors mentioned in this topic
Mary Roach (other topics)Tess Gerritsen (other topics)
The Bone Garden by Tess Gerritsen