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Book Reviews of Fatal Cure

Fatal Cure
Fatal Cure
Author: Robin Cook
ISBN-13: 9780613215244
ISBN-10: 0613215249
Publication Date: 5/2000
Reading Level: Ages 9-12
Rating:
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0 stars, based on 0 rating
Publisher: Rebound by Sagebrush
Book Type: School Library Binding
Reviews: Amazon | Write a Review

23 Book Reviews submitted by our Members...sorted by voted most helpful

Readnmachine avatar reviewed Fatal Cure on + 1440 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 3
Cook's medical thriller genre mires down in this offering as the author repeatedly drags in his soapbox to lecture the reader about the evils of managed care. There's a pretty good story here, but Cook won't get out of his own way and let it unfold. (He also needs to hire a copy editor who knows the difference between a shotgun and a rifle.)
reviewed Fatal Cure on + 70 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
Very frightening book about the world of HMOs. Slow start, but picked up halfway through and went screechingly fast at the end.
roarlady avatar reviewed Fatal Cure on + 24 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
Cook, bestselling medical suspense author does it again...healthcare reform, murder and deadly irradiation combine to propel you along the gruesome corridors of a community hospital with a horrific twist.
reviewed Fatal Cure on + 181 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
It will scare you out of going to the emergency room~
reviewed Fatal Cure on
Helpful Score: 1
Great medical thriller!!
reviewed Fatal Cure on + 174 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
This Robin Cook medical thriller kept me reading until I finished the book. A look at managed care that manages to murder.
reviewed Fatal Cure on + 30 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
Hard book to put down
reviewed Fatal Cure on + 7 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
Exciting
reviewed Fatal Cure on + 120 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
Controversial thriller about the health-care reform in America.
reviewed Fatal Cure on + 74 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
Typical Cook. If you like him, you'll enjoy this one.
reviewed Fatal Cure on
Helpful Score: 1
Recent medical school graduates David and Angela Wilson find the perfect setting for both their careers and family in rural Bartlet, Vermont. Not even the recent suicide and disappearance of two other physicians dampen their enthusiasm as they begin their jobs and buy their dream house. David's confidence is soon shaken, however, as his patients begin dying-not from their terminal diseases but from a mysterious illness. The deaths, coupled with attacks in the hospital parking lot, give the Wilsons the uneasy feeling that Bartlet is not what it seems. When a gruesome discovery prompts the Wilsons to hire a private investigator, the lives of several patients-and they themselves-are in danger.
reviewed Fatal Cure on + 223 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
Excellent book. Nice combination of medical intrigue and emotional developement of characters.
reviewed Fatal Cure on + 63 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
Murder and mystery reach epidemic proportions when a devasting plague sweeps the country....
reviewed Fatal Cure on + 204 more book reviews
I am a huge Cook fan so I held out and made it through the beginning which was very slow. After that the plot does pick up pace but the characters are not well developed but overall the book was well written and it made for an easy read.
jane1959 avatar reviewed Fatal Cure on + 24 more book reviews
With the state-of-art facility and peaceful Vermont setting, the Bartlet Community Hospital seems like a dream come true. It offered doctors David and Angela Wilson new career opportunities, a chance to work within an enlightened system of "managed care"- and a perfect place to raise their daughter, who suffers from cystic fibrosis. But then, one by one, their dreams turned to nightmares. And day by day, their patients begin to die.
reviewed Fatal Cure on + 111 more book reviews
Fatal Cure is a hair-raising, timely foray into the dark side of medical refrom, proving that with "managed care" the unthinkable can be as close as the local hospital
reviewed Fatal Cure on + 11 more book reviews
Fatal Cure is Robin Cook's most controversial book ever written about the darker side of managed health care in America. A married couple start a hospital business where they can treat several patients in a day, including their daughter who suffers from crystic fibrosis. For awhile, it works until their patients begin to die and when a dead body is discovered is their basement, they begin to lose popularity. A very suspensful book, this could actually happen. Overall, a good book!
sealady avatar reviewed Fatal Cure on + 657 more book reviews
From Publishers Weekly: "...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..." Literary Guild and Doubleday Book Club main selection; Mystery Guild alternate; Reader's Digest Condensed Book.
Copyright 1993 Reed Business Information, Inc. --
reviewed Fatal Cure on + 204 more book reviews
I am a huge Cook fan so I held out and made it through the beginning which was very slow. After that the plot does pick up pace but the characters are not well developed but overall the book was well written and it made for an easy read.
reviewed Fatal Cure on + 35 more book reviews
A medical thriller about managed care
Tx-Blaize avatar reviewed Fatal Cure on + 29 more book reviews
"Doctors Angela and David Wilson believe they have found the perfect life in Vermont, until people die of unexplained deaths." - worldcat.org
reviewed Fatal Cure on + 304 more book reviews
I love all his books, this is a good suspense story that could actually happen.
reviewed Fatal Cure on + 154 more book reviews
loved it