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The Apprentice
The Apprentice

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Author: Tess Gerritsen
Publisher: Bantam Books
Category: Book

List Price: £6.99
Buy Used: £2.24
You Save: £4.75 (68%)



New (31) from £3.05

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 25 reviews
Sales Rank: 4361

Media: Paperback
Edition: New edition
Pages: 432
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.4
Dimensions (in): 7 x 3.9 x 1.1

ISBN: 0553817078
EAN: 9780553817072
ASIN: 0553817078

Publication Date: January 17, 2005
Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days
Condition: **UK SHIPPED**SWIFT RELIABLE SERVICE** With friendly customer care! "Buy with confidence, Buy Book EcoLOGICal" Some discolour on page edges

Also Available In:

  • Hardcover - The Apprentice
  • Unknown Binding - Apprentice, The
  • Paperback - The Apprentice
  • Hardcover - The Apprentice
  • Paperback - The Apprentice
  • School & Library Binding - Apprentice
  • Hardcover - The Apprentice (Windsor Selection)
  • Paperback - The Apprentice
  • Hardcover - The Apprentice (Wheeler Large Print Book Series)
  • Hardcover - The Apprentice
  • Unknown Binding - THE APPRENTICE
  • Mass Market Paperback - The Apprentice

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Customer Reviews:   Read 20 more reviews...

3 out of 5 stars Good but not as good as The Surgeon   June 3, 2008
This is quite a good book though not so gripping as The Surgeon. I read it in 3 evenings so I must've quite enjoyed it to finish it so quickly but afterwards when I thought about it, there wasn't actually that much to the story. Someone is going around killing people, the murderer from the previous book escapes prison (which it tells you on the cover, so I'm not spoiling it for anyone), and the police attend each crime scene.
To me, though, they don't actually seem to achieve much in the way of detective work. How they actually catch the killers is not through their crime solving (won't say any more as I don't want to give anything away), and the ending lacks excitement.
It's readable and enjoyable enough and I would recommend it, just a little flat at the end after a promising read through the rest of the book.



3 out of 5 stars Interesting sequel   November 29, 2007
This is a sequel to The Surgeon and really is best read as a sequel. This review contains information that may be considered spoilers to The Surgeon.

Jane Rizzoli is once again drawn into a serial killer's path. He has some of the aspects of Warren Hoyt, but Warren is in jail. When Warren escapes and joins forces with this other killer Jane is in danger, particularly when they find the information left by Warren for them. Enough to make Jane and the FBI agent working on this case Gabriel Dean very nervous.

This is a high 3* story, not quite as good as The Surgeon and occasionally the pace lags but I found it an interesting read. I did wonder about some issues occasionally but found it overall quite a good read.



1 out of 5 stars The laziest book of all time..   August 14, 2007
 3 out of 11 found this review helpful

Oh, my goodness. This is possibly the laziest book I've ever read.

Imagine you want to write a thriller. Imagine you're not very good at writing. So here we go:

Main character - oh hell, let's make her a woman. Since she's a woman, every other cop will be male and an unreconstructed, lazy mysoginist with 1950s attitudes.
Villain - oh dear, can't think of anything. Erm. Okay, he's a psycopath who's also skilled at surgery. No-one's ever done that before.
Plot - let's not really bother, eh?

Result - one Tess Gerritsen novel.

Like Patricia Cornwell, she has a forensics background, and Lord, doesn't she want you to know it. Endless garbage about how this test was done, or that science operates. We don't care, Tess. It's supposed to be about the plot, not what degree certificates hang on your wall at home.

When, oh when, will turgid thriller writers like this wake up? Law & Order manages to have police captains, DAs, and cops, none of whom have to walk through a bunch of neanderthals every morning. They are cops, or DAs, and have professional respect given accordingly. It is so lazy, and so pathetically lame, to use gender as a supposed instrument of "dramatic tension" within a team. Grow up. There are a million and one other reasons for this kind of friction, which are far more entertaining and interesting to write. Urban/rural, religion, race, politics, personal ambition, language, previous working history - these all spring to mind. But ah, they would require some imagination and effort to write. Far easier to go back to the same lame old stuff that's been churned out for thirty years. You know where you are with that, don't you?

If you want a brainless thriller, then fine, Tess has written one. But really, it's so formulaic and by-the-numbers, I imagine she could write this while driving down the interstate, juggling chainsaws and calculating Pi to 3,000 decimal places. Judging by this book, maybe she did.



4 out of 5 stars Another good book from Gerritsen   August 4, 2007
 3 out of 4 found this review helpful

I'm fairly new to Tess Gerritsen having read only 3 other of her books before this one. This book should only be read if you have read The Surgeon beforehand. This is a very good book and flows very easily and is hard to put down which is what ive come to expect from Gerritsen. It's better than the Surgeon but not as good as her phenomenal Vanish.


4 out of 5 stars Not as good as The Surgeon....but not bad either   June 3, 2007
 7 out of 7 found this review helpful

I'm new to Tess Gerritsen but did my homework before I started on her books to make sure I read them in sequence as I dove straight into Karin Slaughter and it drove me nuts not knowing the history.

The Apprentice is definitely a continuation of The Surgeon as we team up once again with Detective Jane Rizzoli as yet another killer is one the loose in Boston. This killer has some of the same characteristics of The Surgeon, a case which has scarred Rizzoli both physically and mentally. The similarities beg the question - "could a killer who she put behind bars be teaching his tricks of the trade to somebody new?".

The book itself is not quite as page-turning as The Surgeon but I think that may be because The Surgeon didn't focus on any one character and kept you going from several different perspectives whereas The Apprentice is focused mainly on Rizzoli and the killers. I have to admit that I didn't warm to Rizzoli in The Surgeon and I still don't think she's a particularly likeable character in The Apprentice but I'm warming to her slowly. The Apprentice is still a cracking story and will keep you engrossed but the ending is slightly rushed. I'm still looking forward to the next installment however.




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