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    Intervention by Robin Cook

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    (Hardcover)

    • Pub. Date: August 2009
    • 448pp
    • Sales Rank: 1,499

      Reader Rating: (32 ratings)

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      Product Details

      • Pub. Date: August 2009
      • Publisher: Penguin Group (USA)
      • Format: Hardcover, 448pp
      • Sales Rank: 1,499

      Synopsis

      New York Times-bestselling author Robin Cook returns with another ripped-from-the-headlines medical thriller, where DNA science, biotechnology, and religion collide.

      I t's been more than thirty years since New York City medical examiner Jack Stapleton's college graduation and almost as long since he'd been in touch with former classmates Shawn Doherty and Kevin Murray. Once a highly regarded ophthalmologist, Jack's career took a dramatic turn after a tragic accident that destroyed his family. But that, too, is very much in the past: Jack has remarried-to longtime colleague and fellow medical examiner Laurie Montgomery-and is the father of a young child. But his renegade, activist personality can't rest, and after performing a postmortem on a young college student who had recently been treated by a chiropractor, Jack decides to explore alternative medicine. What makes some people step outside the medical establishment to seek care from practitioners of Eastern philosophies and even faith healers?

      Jack's classmate Shawn Doherty is now a renowned archeologist and biblical scholar at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, whose taste for good wine and generally deteriorating health are taking a toll on his career. He has recently obtained permission for a final dig beneath Saint Peter's, and despite his long-standing grudge against the Catholic Church, begins his research-which eventually takes him to Jerusalem and Venice -only to make a startling discovery with ecclesiastical and medical implications. And when Kevin Murray, now Bishop of the Archdiocese of New York, gets wind of Shawn's findings, he's desperate to keep them from the public. Kevin has strong political ambitionswithin the Church, but his association with Shawn threatens to undermine them. Kevin turns to his old friend Jack to help protect an explosive secret-one with the power to change lives forever.

      Publishers Weekly

      In this uneven medical thriller from bestseller Cook (Foreign Body), Dr. Jack Stapleton, a New York City forensic pathologist who lost his first wife and their two children in a plane crash, is devastated when his newborn son by his second wife is diagnosed with high-risk neuroblastoma. As a diversion from his efforts to find a cure for his son, Stapleton seeks to expose unscrupulous practitioners of alternative medicine. In particular, he investigates the death of a healthy woman whose vertebral arteries were damaged by a chiropractor. Then the plot swerves into Da Vinci Code territory as two of Stapleton's college friends-the archbishop of New York and an archeologist-battle over skeletal remains that may be those of the Virgin Mary. When the characters themselves comment on the events as something out of a horror movie or a book, suspension of disbelief becomes even more of a challenge (e.g., "He felt like he was a participant in a kind of unfolding real-life mystery-thriller"). (Aug.)

      Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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      Customer Reviews

      Egyptian Escapade.by EGHunter01

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      December 04, 2009: Once you read until chapter eight the story picks up. Jack is back, and back with his "wild" behavior, and he's off to find the cause of his most recent cadaver's demise. Who or what happened to Keara Abelard? That's the mystery Jack wants to solve. Then, many travel miles away, starting in Egypt, a former college dorm mate of Jack's is also trying to solve an ancient conundrum. Begin the "race" for the solution with Jack and experience a "joy" ride through various cities, and along the way learn some new medical terms like VAD. Favorable review: the suspense and mystery keep you intrigued.

      Not up to parby RB013

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      December 03, 2009: I was very disappointed with this book because I have enjoyed other Cook books. This one just wasn't very good. Cook tries too hard to show off his medical expertise. And it also seemed to be another Dan Brown wanna be book. Not sure why I even finished it - probably kept hoping it would get better, after all it was a Robin Cook book.


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