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Christina Schwarz (2001)
Drowning Ruth: A Novel.
Ballantine Books
Schwarz's spenseful debut is a tale of family rivalry, madness, secrets and obsessive love in the 1919s, on the heels of the influenza epidemic and WWI. More...
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James B. Stewart (1999)
Blind Eye: How the Medical Establishment Let a Doctor Get Away with Murder.
Simon & Schuster
Don't read that book when you are sick in a hospital bed! Pulitzer-prize winner James B. Stewart describes the career of Dr. Michael Swango, a handsome physician, who may have poisoned at least 35 of his patients. (Dr. Swango was sentenced to four consecutive life sentences for murdering four of his patients.) More...
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John Case (1998)
The Genesis Code.
Ballantine Books
P.I. Joe Lassiter is searching the murderer of his only sister and her son. As more victims pile up, the hunt leads Lassiter to an Italian fertility clinic, where a well-known physician practices artificial insemination - and possibly something more evil based on cloning. A desperate rural priest and a right-wing catholic sect also become involved in the plot that depicts some of the frightening possibilities of genetic engineering.
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Daniel Keyes (1995)
Flowers for Algernon.
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
Engaging simpleton Charlie Gordon tells his own story in semi-literate "progris riports." He dimly wants to better himself, but with an IQ of 68 can't even beat the laboratory mouse Algernon at maze-solving - until an experimental treatment is taking him steadily past the human average to genius level. A classic! More...
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Copyright © 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011 by Claudia Heilig-Staindl. All Rights Reserved. |