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    Fatal Cure by Robin Cook

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    (Mass Market Paperback)

    • Pub. Date: December 1994
    • 464pp
    • Sales Rank: 191,661
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      Product Details

      • Pub. Date: December 1994
      • Publisher: Penguin Group (USA) Incorporated
      • Format: Mass Market Paperback, 464pp
      • Sales Rank: 191,661

      Synopsis

      The most controversial thriller ever written about health-care reform in America.

      "Riveting...filled with action." (San Diego Union-Tribune)

      "A hair-raising, cautionary tale." (Detroit News)

      Annotation

      This bestselling thriller by the author of Coma presents an all-too-possible scenario of what could happen if "managed care" were to spin out of control. Doctors Angela and David Wison believe they have found professional bliss in the state-of-the-art facility where they've chosen to work. But their dreams are shattered when David's patients begin dying from unknown causes. LG, Doubleday, and Mystery Guild Selections. Special Premiere Sale Date: January 6th.

      Publishers Weekly

      If Cook's skills as a writer were as finely tuned as his sense of timing, his 14th medical thriller (after Terminal ) would be a lot more rewarding. Current political events guarantee that a suspense novel centering on health care management will be topical and at least potentially fascinating. Unfortunately, stock characters, stilted dialogue and improbable heroes and villains make for difficult reading here. Idealistic young doctors David and Angela Wilson take positions at a state-of-the-art medical center in a small Vermont town partly because they see it as an ideal spot for their daughter, who suffers from cystic fibrosis. But the town is not as idyllic as it seems, and the hospital is in a desperate financial bind due primarily to its contract with a local HMO, David's new employer. Worse still, patients are dying unexpectedly almost daily, and no one seems to care very much. The deaths are not normal, of course, and astute readers will quickly determine who is behind them, why and--most likely--how. Cook raises troubling questions about the conflicts between medical and financial priorities in managed care (albeit in a somewhat distorted fashion), but it's difficult to get emotionally involved in a scenario as improbable as this one. Literary Guild and Doubleday Book Club main selection; Mystery Guild alternate; Reader's Digest Condensed Book. (Jan.)

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      Customer Reviews

      Typical Robin Cookby The_Hibernator

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      December 01, 2008: In this twist of Cook?s signature ?doctors-gone-wild? plotline, unsuspecting patients of a rural hospital are plagued by sudden unexplainable deaths as a duo of doctors digs up the dirt. Literally. Although many of Cook?s plots are quite similar, his style is fast-paced suspense that will have the readers guessing at the bad-guy until the last turn. I?m generally not a fan of redundant plotlines or recycled characters, but I?ve recently noticed Cook?s works embody a gigantic medical ethics course. Each book explores a new ethical dilemma. Fatal Cure suggests to the reader that although America?s medical system needs to be renovated, we may be driving it down an even more dangerous superhighway?one with very few exits. This is not one of Cook?s best works. His introduction to the hospital backdrop limps through a few <gag!> administrative meetings. I?m already having nightmares about administrative meetings, thank-you, I don?t need to read about them at bedtime. Once the readers zone out (or check their blackberries) through this sludgy beginning, the plot quickly picks up pace. I recommend this book to any avid Robin Cook fan.

      I Also Recommend: Chromosome 6.

      This was the book that started it allby Anonymous

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      February 25, 2006: This book was very good. This was the first book I ever read by Robin Cook and I've been a fan of his every since. I was looking for a new author to read at the time. I was looking around the bookstore and almost didnt pick this book up. But I'm glad I did. I've enjoyed this book more than once. The story kept me guessing till the end


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