Product Description
Yale professor Dr. Edward Kender’s father is undergoing chemotherapy when the supply of a critical accompanying drug suddenly runs out. Unwilling to accept the drug company’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… More >>
Search This Site
Make Money from Home
More Savings for You
-
Recent Posts
- Quiksilver Men’s Avalanche 22 BoardShorts Swim Suit Walk Shorts Blue-30
- Fred Perry Men’s Plain Swim Short, Dark Carbon, Medium
- U.S. Polo Assn. “Wax Seal” Swim Trunks (Sizes 8 – 20) – navy, 8
- Kanu Surf Women’s Breeze Swim Shorts, Aqua, 0
- Quiksilver Men’s Avalanche 22 BoardShorts Swim Suit Walk Shorts Blue-33
Recent Comments
- Dylan on Original Penguin Men’s Solid Volley Swim Short, True Black, 30 Reviews
- Paul H. Hunt on TYR Sport Men’s Square Leg Short Swim Suit,Black,32
- Babs "Babs" on TYR Sport Men’s Square Leg Short Swim Suit,Black,32
- A. Fegely on TYR Sport Men’s Square Leg Short Swim Suit,Black,32
- D. Held on TYR Sport Men’s Swim Short/Resistance Short Swim Suit,Navy,M
Categories
Archives
- May 2012
- April 2012
- March 2012
- February 2012
- December 2011
- November 2011
- October 2011
- September 2011
- August 2011
- July 2011
- June 2011
- May 2011
- April 2011
- March 2011
- February 2011
- January 2011
- November 2010
- October 2010
- September 2010
- August 2010
- July 2010
- June 2010
- May 2010
- April 2010
- March 2010
- February 2010
- January 2010
- December 2009
-
Black Kindle Lawn Loss Digital Case Laptop Battery Stocking Portable iMac Widescreen 4.3Inch Image Short Fitness Guitar Kanu Weight Stabilized Men's Series Surf Swim Christmas Nuvi Zoom Women's Novel Edition Camera Power Exercise Dell Navigator Adapter Optical Mower Book. reviews inch Garmin Running Apple Hero
Disclaimer
The product names used in this web site are for identification purposes only. All trademarks and registered trademarks are the property of their respective owners. Amazon.comâ„¢ is a registered trademark of Amazon.com, Inc. in the United States and/or other countries.



In the beginning of this story, private investigator and part-time ballet instructor Erin Pulaski is breaking into the Schiffer Hartwin Parmaceutical company’s CEO’s office. All is going well so far. Her client who is a professor at Yale has a father with colon cancer and there’s been a sudden shortage of an important chemotherapy accompanying drug, Culovort. The suddenness of this has Erin suspicious and since other avenues of trying to talk with the CEO have failed, she is risking her life and reputation. She is able to access his office and his computer and finds files on the Culovort shortage plan which she prints out. As they are printing, Erin hears two voices coming down the hall: a man and a woman and it sounds like the CEO Caskie Royal and he is with a co-worker. They sound a bit drunk and definitely disorderly. Luckily Erin has time to grab her print job, tuck it into her jacket and get into the executive bathroom where there is a window just large enough for her to get out. She is heard as she gets out but runs fast and is not seen by the CEO.
In a second story, Sherlock and Savich are hidden outside of US Senator Hoffman’s home keeping an eye on his bedroom window where he told them he has seen the spector of his deceased wife Nikki the last several nights. He believes she is trying to tell him something but he doesn’t know what. Hoffman is a friend of Sherlock and Savich’s boss, FBI section chief, Jimmy Maitland. Mr. Maitland is concerned some one might be playing a prank or something more sinister on the senator. Savich and Sherlock do see the ghost but she doesn’t say anything at that point. Later Savich is visited by her and she warns him that David, Sen. Hoffman, is endanger and doesn’t realize what is happening. Extra security is set up for the Senator and Savich also lets him know what he believes Nikki wants to warn him about.
The author throws into the mix FBI Agent Bowie Richards whose seven-year-old daughter Georgie takes ballet lessons from Erin and his desire to have Erin help him out by babysitting Georgie a few days as his usual nanny is out sick. Agent Richards is involved in the break-in at Schiffer Hartwin and also that night a body is found in the park behind the pharmaceutical company and the corpse is quickly identified as an employee of the German main headquarters of Schiffer Hartwin.
This is giving Erin fits as she knows she should confess to doing the break-in and what she found out. On top of that, Sherlock and Savich arrive to help out Bowie so even more FBI agent for Erin to worry about.
Great excitement as the plot lines evolve and are resolved. Romance kept to a minimum – maybe a bit too much but still a great read.
Rating: 5 / 5
Yale Professor Edward Kender has colon cancer in which the drug Culovort he receives as part of his treatment seems to be working when he is informed production by German firm Schiffer Hartwin is nonexistent. Stunned he assumes the pharmaceutical industry is playing death squad to drum up profits. He hires private investigator Erin Pulaski to make an inquiry into the firm. She breaks in and enters the head office of the American subsidiary in Stone Bridge, Connecticut in order to hack into the files of the local CEO Caskie Royal. She finds info on plans to stop the Cartwright Labs in Bartonville, Missouri from manufacturing the drug; as well as stopping it in Spain in favor of a French firm Labortoires Anconder’s drug Eloxium. However, Royal and production manager Carla Alvarez arrive and discuss what they are doing with the firm and then have sex..
The next day she learns that the firm’s troubleshooter was murdered near where she downloaded computer data that made no sense to her. Meanwhile, the FBI sends married couple Agents Sherlock and Savich to Stone Bridge to assist FBI agent Bowie Richards with the homicide. They begin to find troubles with the pharmaceutical company while Pulaski wonders what to do with her illegal download; Pulaski becomes their prime suspect. Savich also investigates the poisoning of a lobbyist whose real target may have been aimed at a US Senator.
This is a great timely entry in the long running S&S FBI police procedural series due to the pharmaceutical connection as much as the freshness brought forth by Richards and more so by Erin who knows her B&E was stupid but felt strongly that they needed to expose true death squad bottom lines. Fast-paced from the onset, the second case takes somewhat of a back seat though it is well written and quite exciting too. Fans of the series will relish this strong entry while newcomers will find Whiplash a winner too.
Harriet Klausner
Rating: 5 / 5
This is another solid story in the Savich and Sherlock series. Sure, it’s silly at times. And yes, there is a little romance between two of the other characters but…It’s fun, fast paced, a little over the top and I really enjoyed it. Is it the best in the series? No. Is it the worst? Not by a long shot! Even if you have never read any of the other books in the series, this book would still be a good, quick read.
Rating: 4 / 5
This book is atrocious. It centers around, and dwells heavily on, the idea that a company has broken the law by finding a way to stop creating a drug. The only problem is that there is nothing illegal in that action. There is an actual crime here in corporate espionage but that is buried in an attempt by Coulter to use the book to lambast the FDA without having first made ANY attempt to check her facts to see if any of them were accurate. Very, very few of them actually are. The entire book has more fantasy than a fairy tale. I don’t expect authors to get every detail correct but they should make an attempt to at least try to be accurate.
If you can get past that mess what is left is just as bad. There is a weak attempt at forcing a paranormal story line into the book. It is poorly developed, poorly explained and does not actually fit into the main story in any logical way.
Coulter did create two fun characters for the book. Unfortunately she never developed them or their story. You are forced to see the story by reading between the lines or seeing the implications.
I will take great pleasure tossing this book on a beach bonfire this summer.
Rating: 1 / 5
Catherine Coulter’s new novel, WHIPLASH, features the return of FBI agents Dillon Savich and Lacey Sherlock. This time, the husband-and-wife team investigates the seemingly unrelated murders of several people.
Assisting them in their investigation is FBI Agent Bowie Richards, whose daughter, Georgie, is a dance student in Erin Pulaski’s class. Erin is not only a dance teacher but also a private investigator who has been hired by an old family friend, Yale professor Dr. Edward Kender, to find out why the chemotherapy drug Culovort, which his father needs to treat colon cancer, is suddenly in short supply. Dr. Kender doesn’t believe Schiffer Hartman Pharmaceutical’s story that the supply has been cut off because of the drug company’s miscalculations and misfortunes. After confronting Caskie Royal, the CEO of Schiffer Hartman’s American operations, with questions about the shortage, Dr. Kender thinks there’s more to the story.
And there is. Using the Internet, Erin does some digging into the company’s background and its supposed reasons for discontinuing the production of Culovort. There’s nothing much to read besides what she’s already been told. She needs solid proof that there is something else going on with the drug company, and she thinks she knows where to find it — in Royal’s office. She breaks in using a set of lock picks that her father (a master lock-picker) gave her, and is then able to gain access to his computer files by guessing his password. What she finds is enough to nail Royal and the company.
But, of course, it’s not that simple; it never is. She gets away with the files, but shortly after the break-in, a body is discovered in the vicinity of Royal’s office. The corpse is that of Helmet Blauvelt, a German national who just happens to be an employee of Schiffer Hartman and has been sent from the German office to investigate the problem with the drug production at the American headquarters.
Savich, Lacey and Richards are called upon to investigate the murder, and they wonder if the same person who broke into Royal’s office killed Blauvelt. Initially they don’t suspect Erin knows anything about the case, but it eventually comes to light that she is in over her head when it comes to dealing with the pharmaceutical company.
I had never read any of Coulter’s previous books that feature Savich and Sherlock, so I was unfamiliar with this duo and how they work together. But the author did a good job of filling in the background information so I felt they weren’t “total strangers.” The story incorporates suspense, mystery, paranormal activities (FBI agent Dillon Savich makes contact with ghosts), romance and humor in a winning combination that is fast-paced and difficult to put down.
Rating: 5 / 5