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Unnatural Exposure

Unnatural Exposuree
First edition
AuthorPatricia Cornwell
LanguageEnglish
SeriesKay Scarpetta
GenreCrime fiction
PublisherG. P. Putnam's Sons
Publication date
1997
Publication placeUnited States
Media typePrint (hardcover, paperback)
Pages367
ISBN0-399-14285-1
OCLC39285687
Preceded byCause of Death 
Followed byPoint of Origin 

Unnatural Exposure is a crime fiction novel by Patricia Cornwell. It is the eighth book in the Dr. Kay Scarpetta series.[1] The story is set in Richmond, Virginia and Ireland.

Plot summary

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Virginia Chief Medical Examiner Kay Scarpetta has a bloody puzzle on her hands: five headless, limbless cadavers in Ireland, plus four similar victims in a landfill back home. Is a serial butcher loose in Virginia? That's what the panicked public thinks, thanks to a local TV reporter who got the leaked news from Scarpetta's rival, Investigator Percy Ring. But this is no run-of-the-mill serial killer. A shadowy figure has plans involving mutant smallpox, mass murder, and messing with Scarpetta's mind by e-mailing her hot naked photos of the murder scenes, along with cryptic AOL chat-room messages.[1] Central to the plot is the case of Janet Parker, the last person known to have died of smallpox, which she contracted in 1978 due to a lab accident in Birmingham, England, after the disease was eradicated in the wild. Cornwell makes the villain a junior employee of the lab at the time who was made a scapegoat for the accident and whose career was blighted as a result. This provides the plot with a credible source for the virus and a motive for the central crime.

The emergency response is complicated by a Federal budget freeze, when all "non-essential" government employees are sent home. Cornwell says in an introduction to a 2008 reprint that a decade ago the idea of a deliberate virus threat seemed fanciful and improbable, and she got more access to government facilities like the CDC for researching the book than she would have got a decade later. She said that her "modus operandi when I write a book is to ask my characters where they are and what they are doing. Then I focus on an image. From that image comes the story .... ".

Characters in Unnatural Exposure

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Victims

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Other deaths

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References

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  1. ^ a b Patricia Daniels Cornwell (1997), Unnatural exposure, G.P. Putnam's, ISBN 9780399142857, retrieved 6 September 2009
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