Kennedy's Brain

464 pages

English language

Published Feb. 1, 2008 by Penguin Random House.

ISBN:
978-0-09-950276-0
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A fast paced international thriller - sure to delight fans starved of WallanderWhen archaeologist Louise Cantor's son Henrik is found dead in his flat, she refuses to believe it was suicide. Clues that only a mother could detect lead her to believe something more sinister took place.Henrik had kept many things back from her and she is shocked to learn he had contracted HIV. While looking through his bundles of papers, she discovers he was obsessed with the conspiracy theory that JFK's brain disappeared prior to the autopsy – along with the vital evidence regarding bullet exit wounds. The only lead is a letter and photograph from Henrik's girlfriend in Mozambique.Louise's quest to unravel the mystery surrounding her son's death takes her to Africa; a continent rife with disease, poverty and corruption. Struggling to cope with sickness and the oppressive heat, Louise sees fear in every face, even unexpectedly in …

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[a:Henning Mankell|22339|Henning Mankell|http://photo.goodreads.com/authors/1223191641p2/22339.jpg] is perhaps best known for his detective stories set in the south of Sweden, featuring detective Karl Wallander. This is also a detective novel of sorts, but the protagonist is not a professional detective, but a middle-aged archaeologist, Louise Cantor, whose expertise has hitherto been confined to solving riddles of the distant past.

I found the story very reminiscent of [b:The Constant Gardener|19000|The Constant Gardener|John le Carré|http://photo.goodreads.com/books/1167175767s/19000.jpg|1442776] by [a:John le Carre|1411964|John le Carré|http://photo.goodreads.com/authors/1234571122p2/1411964.jpg], in that it deals with murders linked to multinational pharmaceutical companies, and the action moves from Greece, to Sweden, to Spain to Australia to Mocambique and back again. Australia is the only country visited only once.

Mankell does a very good job of building up a sense of mystery, followed by a sense of menace, in the early chapters, but unfortunately the story tends to fall apart towards the end, on the second visit …

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Subjects

  • Fiction, thrillers, general
  • Aids (disease), fiction
  • Women archaeologists, fiction
  • Stockholm (sweden), fiction
  • Greece, fiction
  • Mothers and sons, fiction