Monday, June 28, 2021

The Burning by Jonathan and Jesse Kellerman

Clay Edison is Deputy Coroner for Alameda County California and feels blessed to love his job and his young family.  It’s wildfire season in California and the electricity is out indefinitely in their home so Clay’s wife takes their daughter a goes to visit relatives in L.A.  Edison is called to investigate a murder of a wealthy retired man and is stunned to find his brother’s beloved muscle car in the murdered man’s garage with other collectable cars.  Clay’s brother, Luke has recently been released from prison and is nowhere to be found.  Clay does not reveal his discovery to the police as he frantically tries to contact Luke.  Neither Luke’s wife nor employer have seen him in two days and Clay must assume Luke is associated with the murder, likely with prison pals.  But as Clay gains more information he discovers that Luke may be in trouble because of previous actions Clay took in his job.  Luke could be an innocent victim.  Not knowing who he can trust, Clay sets out to find Luke on his own… a dangerous decision.

 

I’ve always enjoyed Jonathan Kellerman’s Alex Delaware novels but must admit the formula is repetitive.  With son, Jesse’s help this new younger protagonist brings a more energetic buzz to the story. But that driving pace of methodically revealing new information that leads to a surprising conclusion remains… a skill that Jonathan K. has mastered in spades.  Fun read.

 

Thanks to Netgalley for the advance copy.

 

 

Friday, June 25, 2021

A Good Kill


 



The Cover Wife by Dan Fesperman

Claire Saylor is a career CIA operative based on Europe. Competent, but has a tendency to overstep her assignment and occasionally, that has gotten her in the doghouse. And she’s in the doghouse, or at least she thinks she is. We are in late 1999ish.

Claire has been given a crap assignment. Some US academic has published his take on the Koran based on his fluency with the actual language in which the Koran was originally written. She has to pose as his wife as he moves about the lecture circuit on this European tour and make sure no one make a move on him. Apparently, his translation doesn’t fit the modern narrative of Islam and some fanatics have been rumbling that this man probably needs to cease writing . . . permanently.

Mahmoud is the stereotype of the young man who is perfect for recruitment. Disillusioned, alone, trying to find his way, whatever that might be, in Hamburg. While not committed to Islam, he migrates to a mosque with a fairly radical Iman. Desperate to belong, he is drawn into a clique of more radicalized men. The longer he is drawn in, the more he comes to realize that something big is coming. Something huge.

In the meantime, Claire is becoming increasingly frustrated with her baby-sitting assignment. Especially with the more she learns about this guy. On one level, he’s a classic nerd. On another level, he seems like a lousy actor playing a part.

The deeper Mahmoud gets in with this group of guys, the more involved become his assignments. He sees them as tests that will get him something truly meaningful. How Mahmoud’s descent into radicalized thought intersects with Claire’s cover as a wife is the crux of the story. Don’t expect me to present any spoilers. And the spoiler in this story is a whopper that lovers of spy stories won’t want to miss.

Fesperman is a prolific author of classic spy novels. We here at MRB have reviewed favorably 8 earlier books of his all of which were all excellent. But the spoiler in this one is a doozy and, for me, that alone puts this at the top of the Fesperman books we’ve reviewed. Methinks that in the spy novel corner of the market, Fesperman sort of flies a bit under the radar and I'm not sure I know why.

Regardless, do you like spy books? This one’s for you. Don’t pass it up.

Available July 6, 2021

ECD

Steel Fear by Brandon Webb and John David Mann

 Meet Finn. Just Finn. A SEAL with a rep. A good rep up until his last assignment in the Middle East. Something went south. Dead civilians  and he was the only survivor of his platoon. Higher ups need to talk to him back in San Diego. So he is helicoptered to an aircraft carrier headed back to Hawaii for routine maintenance. 

Seems a little odd that Finn's transport to San Diego would be a slow carrier instead of some flight. He arrives under a veil of suspicion and if quartered in a room the size of a broom closet. The trip home will be a slow crawl. To pass the time, Finn draws. Draws what he sees. Pretty good, too. Nice detail and easily appreciated. He has a long trip ahead of him.

Being a SEAL, he is afforded some leeway. What little association he has with the crew is primarily with some officers, but he manages to make a friend or two with some seamen who never see the sun. And he gets a feel for the character of the ship.

And that feel isn't good. The Captain has effectively, lost his crew. He rarely makes an appearance, doesn't little to improve morale. While a revolt isn't likely, the cruise downright sucks. 

Right up until a crewman is killed. An investigation starts. Finn keeps his ears open and one of the rumors is that he is a suspect. That all seemed well until that SEAL boarded the ship. He is considered to be damaged goods. Ergo. A suspect.

Then another crewman is killed. And the direction of inquiry shifts away from Finn. But just a little. 

Another crewman commits suicide by jumping off ship. Jumped off a landing where Finn would go to draw. Of course, that makes Finn more of a target. He's' a loner. An outsider. Came aboard under a cloud of suspicion. Has to be him. Yet Finn keep to himself and compiles facts differently. Maybe if he can figure out what's happening, it'll help clear his name after that disastrous mission. 

If he can stay alive long enough.

This is an intriguing concept: a serial killer on an aircraft carrier. A closed environment filled with people all trained, on at least a most basic level, as killers. The main question is less who is capable, but killer's motivation is paramount. What would drive someone to start picking off the crew that have been cloistered for months. Personally, I kind of like the Finn character. Sort of a sympathetic hero who we really aren't fully sure if he did or didn't screw up on that last mission. That's for you to decide. The story is authentic being written by a decorated SEAL (Webb) and an accomplished author (Mann). You won't go wrong with this one. Definitely a unique tale.

Available July 13, 2021

ECD

Gumshoe for Two by Paul Leininger

 

#2 in the Mortimer Angel saga. 

Mort is still trying to become a PI after dumping his career as an IRS agent. As in the initial book (Gumshoe), Mort is divorced, drinks too much, hangs out at the Reno casinos, sort of stumbles into a knack for attracting women, cracks shit on anyone who unlucky enough to exchange two sentences with him, and constantly belittles his lack of PI street cred. 

He has to put in a ton of ‘internship’ hours to get a Nevada PI license. Tracking cheaters is a bogus assignment, but you do what you gotta do. The Reno mayor’s wife thinks her hubby is running around on her. Mort tracks the mayor to his paramour’s bed, which turns out to be Mort’s ex-wife. Then the mayor disappears. Then the Reno DA disappears. A basic case of a husband cheating morphs into a missing person’s case that takes one bizarre turn after another. But that doesn’t interfere with his luck with the women.

While trying to track down the mayor and the DA is a monotonous series of

(bizarre) steps, when the solution to the disappearances becomes apparent, the plodding and complicate nature of the investigation takes a violent and intense finale. The result being that Mort becomes a media darling, something that PIs in training just don’t get.

Mortimer Angel is who most readers would like to be: smart, sarcastic (to the nth degree), self-deprecating, and a killer with the women. The story is sort of complicated, but not hard to follow. And I doubt any reader will find fault with the dialogue. We all should have his wit. A terrific break from the ordinary crime procedural. Could be a standalone, but if you have the option, read Gumshoe first.

ECD

Thursday, June 24, 2021

These Silent Woods by Kimi Cunnungham Grant

It's been 8 years. Eight years in the Appalachian wilderness. Living as off the grid as humanly possible. Eight years. 

Cooper and his daughter Finch live in a cabin owned by an Army buddy. After Afghanistan, Cooper tried to return home to a normal life. Great wife whose parents had no time for Cooper. Hated the very air he breathed.

Newborn daughter arrives. As does a random act no one saw coming. His in laws come for their infant granddaughter. Cooper hands her over and immediately starts planning how to get her back. The legal obstacles are great. Too great to be left to chance, so Cooper takes things into his own hands and heads for the backwoods with his daughter in tow.

After a few years, this old mountain man shows up. Calls himself Scotland. Arrives unannounced. Never heard him coming. Suspicious is Cooper. Guy lives in a neighboring cabin. Been keeping an eye of this little family through his high power spotting scope. Strange indeed. But Finch seems taken with him despite his rough exterior.

Once a year, Cooper's buddy drive a truck in with supplies. Cooper grows and hunts his own food, but other necessities have to be purchased and Cooper wants to stay hidden, thus the delivery. This year, no delivery. Not good. Scotland is also concerned for the owner as well as Cooper and Finch. Manages to scrape together some things they need. Cooper even takes the risk of venturing into town for supplies. 

The winter is setting in. Snow arrives. As does a visitor. A woman. Drove up like she knew the route. She should. She's the owner's sister. She knew of the annual supply runs. Knowing her brother couldn't make it, she filled up a car and headed for the cabin . . . and gets snowed in (of course). But it is her nosey nature that stimulates Cooper and Finch to check out the rumor of a missing high school girl. 

I had no clue what I was getting myself in for. But after a single chapter, I was hooked. Call this a modern day Jeremiah Johnson story (without the Crow Indians). Man (and daughter) testing themselves in the wilderness. What could be better. A quiet tale primarily about 3 people (Cooper, Finch, Scotland) and how a new insertion can bring out more from most people than they knew they had and what they were willing to give up. 

A splendid tale. Can't say enough. Highly recommended. 

Available October 26, 2021

ECD

 



The Guide by Peter Heller

 We are 3 years into the pandemic (or is it a new strain, who knows). While the world is back on lockdown, money has a way of softening the inconvenience. One such cushion is the Kingfisher Lodge. A boutique fishing outfit that caters to the uber rich. Set amongst bountiful trout streams deep in the Rockies, the beautiful and the shamelessly rich can kill time being pampered and personally guided to where the fish are biting.

Guests are assigned to individual guides. Local fishing experts who will ensure that the fishing is nothing short of spectacular. A new guide is just off his orientation. Jack is a son of Colorado who went back east for college, but when a black cloud descended on him back in the NH wilderness, he returned to CO to recover. And what better way to recover than to get paid to fish, something he does quite well. 

Jack's first client is Alison, a pop singer of some note, not that Jack has any clue about the current pop music scene. But she's no newbie. A North Carolina native who grew up country can handle a rod, hook, and bait with the best of 'em. That means Jack's entry into luxury fishing should be pretty easy.

The assignment suits him. As they explore the streams, a creek against the current reveals barb wire fencing, guard dogs, and a mansion on a distant hill. The shoreline shows evidence that something had died here. Given the remoteness of the Lodge, the remains could be anything.

The clientele seems a smidge off. Alison is normal, as rich pop singers go, but the others seem peculiar. Some days they are quite personable. Other days they seem drugged. And a bunch don't seem to have much interest in fishing. 

Jack and Alison are well suited for each other. Curious types they are. Willing to go snooping around at all hours of the day and night. And what they find will chill you right down to your marrow. 

I've since learned that this is Heller's 2nd book about Jack. First is called The River and you can bet I'll be looking for it. Jack is an easy character to pull for, given a couple of heartbreaking episodes from his past. Heller contributes to NPR, Outside Magazine, Men's Journal, with lots of kayaking experience. Read this guy's 'About' segment on his website and I'm betting you'll be jealous. 

Available August 24, 2021

ECD

Lightning Strike by William Kent Krueger

Krueger’s longtime hero, Sheriff Cork O’Connor, lives way the hell up in upper Wisconsin where he deals with the locals, natives, and various out-of-towners attempting to upset the proverbial apple cart. This book is a departure. It presents some of O’Connor’s backstory (probably the first to do so, I think).

Lightning Strike takes place in one of those lazy summers when Cork was around 12. Most days are he and a couple buds biking around town and camping and canoeing in the Boundary Waters area. His dad is the Sheriff of Aurora, WI who sort of unwittingly is showing Cork the tools of the trade that will help him as an adult when he himself becomes the sheriff.

Cork and his friends canoe out for a campsite along one of the numerous nearby lakes. As they approach the site near sunset, they notice something terribly out of place. A man hanging from a tree. The evidence points to a suicide and Sheriff O’Connor tends to think so. And not just any man. A local legend around the Ojibwe peoples that most of the kids looked up to. He’d had issues with alcohol but seemed to have put that behind him. The Ojibwe people are suspicious of the Sheriff’s line of investigation despite the Sheriff being one-quarter Ojibwe.

Racial tensions percolate, most of which perplex young Cork. The Ojibwe and the whites have an uneasy truce. And within the whites, there is a noticeable gap between the haves and the have nots. Not to mention some mingling of the races and classes make seemingly dozens of possible suspects. Some rich folks want to develop the lakeshore with a swank hotel and its false promises of jobs and prosperity for all the locals. If the truth can’t be uncovered, Aurora may well explode in a long awaited civil war. Within these conflicting tensions, Cork and he pals pick at various clues trying to find out who killed their friend.

Kruegar has given us (me in particular) two of the very best novels I’ve ever read. Ordinary Grace and This Tender Land. I first stumbled across Krueger through his Cork O’Connor series and this title is his 18th in the series, but seeing as how this is a backstory book, call this one #0 and not #18.

Krueger is a smooth and skillful writer who can speak easily across genders, ages, and ethnicities. Start with Ordinary Grace and This Tender Land, then venture into the Cork O’Connor series. A gentle hook will draw you into a mystical and mysterious land. 

 

East Coast Don

 

 

Sunday, June 20, 2021

Lady Chevy by John Woods

Let’s get it out of the way right away. High school senior Amy Wirkner is fat. Morbidly obese. 270+ pounds. So broad-beamed is Amy, that those who belittle her call her Lady Chevy both behind her back and to her face. Has become an Honor student. In spite of the harassment. Wants to become a veterinarian. Few friends. She lives in a trailer with her limp noodle dad who does a little roof work and hides behind a bottle. Mom is also fat, but has not always been so. Not like Amy. Stonewall is Amy’s toddler brother, beset with a seizure disorder that may be genetic or may be from poisoned groundwater. 

You see, their hometown, Barnesville, OH is the latest dreg town to be wooed by the promise of riches after fracking muscles in. In her own attempt to deny her lot in life, Amy’s mom prowls the bars and openly flaunts her infidelity. 

Amy does have a lifelong friend, Paul McDonald, who Amy may or may not love. They tried at about 14 or 15yo, but a romantic connection didn’t fit. Coal mining is slowly taking Paul’s dad from him. Amy’s grandfather’s reputation is that he was once the local Grand Dragon of the Klan and is not ashamed of the cruelty he oversaw. And Amy’s Uncle Thomas, a damaged Afghanistan vet, fancies himself as Goebbels in a bunker.

The sheriff’s office is a microcosm of legal white power. The sheriff holds sway over Barnesville, but it’s Deputy Brett Hastings who Woods uses to speak for law-and-order residents on the high side of the tracks. Hastings is the child of academics who went to one of the most liberal of liberal arts colleges, Oberlin. Started out in a career-oriented major only to switch to philosophy. Worse, after a failed attempt at grad school, he defied his parents and enrolled in the police academy. Sees himself as sort of the keeper of the soul of the sheriff’s department. Where he routinely lectures his partners on all sorts of philosophical theories that support his beliefs on the duality of man, of which he is the primary perpetrator of find the bad guys and then dispatch of them according to his own stilted belief system.

Paul McDonald has had it with the frackers. They poison the air, the water, the people. The pitiful monthly payments for land access and mineral rights are a joke. With some help from a book on violent protest, he prepares a pipe bomb to sabotage a fracking pump and asks Amy to drive him. She balks, but gives in to her lifelong friend. The bombing goes well, but there was a guard on duty.

And from here, things go downhill. Dramatically. Quickly. Not only are the police looking at more than a case of ecoterrorism, Amy has to think about how their actions will impact her family, her future, her chance of a scholarship to Ohio State. We all know that universities abhor admitting felons much less giving them money.And just how low will she go to stay on the course she has planned for herself and much of the town expects for her.

This book is tough. If we look past the superficial story, a number of background themes emerge. The desperation of the forgotten. Could be an ecological thriller about the disasters of fracking. Perhaps it’s a statement about the rise from the ashes of being bullied as a child to being one who falls into becoming a felon who commits atrocities. Maybe it’s about the dissolution of a family trying to survive. Or a comment on white privilege? Could consider it to be about the emotional growth of the fat girl from living a shamed life as an emotionally beaten child to become an honor student and college applicant destined to turn her back on her youth and a land she despises. Or is it simply secrets and lies across the generations from both side of the tracks. Guess that means that Appalachian Noir has something for everyone.

What John Woods has done is present an eloquently written statement on the futility of those left behind in America. He focuses on his home, rural east-central Ohio, where strip mining once was king, but has given way to the promises of fracking. Lady Chevy focuses on familiar ground for Woods who grew up in the decaying region just west of Wheeling. What some might challenge or praise is that Woods, a white male MFA graduate, has made his protagonist a fat, disenfranchised female from nowhere, USA. Woods’ narrative gifts show no hesitation for him making such a significant jump from his personal comfort zone. What’s even more impressive is that this is his first novel (after having published a number of short stories).  

Go into this book forewarned. This is a dark and depressing story told with such authenticity that setting is aside can be problematic. After reading this review, you may decide to find and read this book. You may then curse me for bringing it to your attention. But you won’t forget this descent into a life that must not be ignored. For that, you just might thank me because you probably wouldn’t have given these people a single thought. Remember the name of John Woods. I suspect a new and important voice is in our midst.


East Coast Don

Saturday, June 12, 2021

Act of Negligence

 


I've already reviewed with book with glowing praise. Please see that review. I'm now submitting a sample from the book, as provided by Anna Sacca, Publicity Director at FSB Associates:

Act of Negligence: A Medical Thriller (A Doc Brady Mystery)


Chapter 1

by John Bishop, MD


Excerpted from Act of Negligence. Copyright © 2021 by John Bishop.

All rights reserved. Published by Mantid Press.

BEATRICE ADAMS

Monday, May 15, 2000

“Morning, Mrs. Adams. I’m Dr. Brady.”

There was no response from the patient in Room 823 of University Hospital.

She was crouched on the bed, in position to leap toward the end of the bed

in the direction of yours truly. I could not determine her age, but she

definitely appeared to be a wild woman. Her hair was a combination of gray

and silver, long and uncombed and in total disarray. She had a deeply lined

face, leathery, with no makeup. Her brown eyes were frantic, and her head

moved constantly to the right and left. She was clad only in an untied

hospital gown which dwarfed her small frame. My guess? She wasn’t over

five feet tall.

“Ms. Adams? Dr. Morgenstern asked me to stop by and see about your

knee?”

She did not move or speak; she just continued squatting there in the

hospital bed, bouncing slightly on her haunches, and staring at me while her

head moved slowly to and fro.

I looked around the drab private room with thin out-of-date drapes and

faded green-tinted walls. There were no flowers. I judged the patient to

most likely be a nursing-home transfer.

I made the safe move by backing out of the patient’s room, and I walked the

twenty yards to the nurses’ station. The white-tiled floors were freshly

waxed, but the medicinal smell was distinctly different from the surgical

wing. There was an unpleasant pine scent in the air that could not hide the

odor of decaying human beings and leaking body fluids. It was the smell of

chronic illness and disease.

“Cynthia?” I asked the head nurse on the medical ward, or so announced her

name tag. She was sitting at the far side of the long nursing station desk


performing the primary duty of a nursing supervisor: paperwork. She was an

attractive Black woman in her mid-forties, I estimated.

“Yes, sir?”

“Dr. Morgenstern asked me to see Mrs. Adams in consultation. Room 823?

What’s the matter with her? She won’t answer me. She just stares, sitting

up in the bed on her haunches, bouncing.”

She smiled and shook her head. “You must be a surgeon.”

“Yes, ma’am. Orthopedic. Dr. Jim Brady.”

“Cynthia Dumond. Mrs. Adams has Alzheimer’s. Sometimes she gets

confused. Want me to come in the room with you? Maybe protect you?” she

said with a smile.

“Well, I wouldn’t mind the company,” I said, a little sheepishly. “Not that I

was afraid or anything.”

“She’s harmless, Doctor. She’s just old and confused.”

We walked back to the hospital room together. The patient seemed to relax

the moment she saw the head nurse, a familiar face. “Hello, Ms. Adams,”

Cynthia said. “This is Dr. Brady. He needs to examine your . . .” She gazed at

me, smiling again. “Your what?” “Her knee.”

“Dr. Brady needs to look at your knee. Okay?”

The patient had ceased shaking and bouncing, leaned back, slowly extended

her legs, laid down, and became somewhat still.

“Very good, Ms. Adams. Very good,” Cynthia said, grasping the elderly

woman’s hand and holding it while she looked at me. “Go ahead, Doctor.”

The woman’s right knee was quite swollen, with redness extending up and

down her leg for about six inches in each direction. When I applied anything

but gentle skin pressure, her leg seemed to spasm involuntarily. How in the

world she had managed to crouch on the bed with her knee bent to that

degree was mystifying.

“Sorry, Ms. Adams,” I said, but continued my exam. The knee looked and felt

infected, but those signs could also have represented a fracture or an acute

arthritic inflammation such as gout, pseudo-gout, or rheumatoid arthritis,


not to mention an array of exotic diseases. I tried to flex and extend the

knee, but she resisted, either due to pain—although I wasn’t certain she had

a normal discomfort threshold—or from a mechanical block due to swelling

or some type of joint pathology.

“What’s she in the hospital for?” I asked Nurse Cynthia.

“Dehydration, malnutrition, and failure to thrive, the usual diagnoses for

folks we get from the nursing home. The doctor who runs her particular

facility sent her in.”

“Who is it?”

“Dr. Frazier. Know him?”

“Nope. Should I?”

“No. It’s just that he sends his patients here in the end stages. Most of the

folks that get admitted from his nursing home die soon after they arrive.”

“Most of them are old and sick, aren’t they?”

“Yes.”

I looked at her expression while she continued to hold Mrs. Adams’s hand.

“Were you trying to make a point?”

“Not really.” She glanced at her watch. “Are you about through, Doctor

Brady? I have quite a bit of work to do.”

“Follow that paper trail, huh?”

“Yes. That’s about all I have time for these days. Seems to get worse every

month. Some new form to fill out, some new administrative directive to

analyze. Whatever.”

“I know the feeling. There isn’t much time to see the patients and take care

of whatever ails them these days. If my secretary can’t justify to an

insurance clerk why a patient needs an operation, then I have to waste my

time on the phone explaining a revision hip replacement to someone without

adequate training or experience. One of my partners told me yesterday

about an insurance clerk that was giving him a bunch of—well, giving him a

hard time—about performing a bunionectomy. He found out during the


course of a fifteen-minute conversation that the woman didn’t know a

bunion was on the foot. Her insurance code indicated it was a cyst on the

back and she couldn’t find the criteria for removal in the hospital. She was

insisting it had to be an office procedure, and only under a local anesthetic.

Crazy, huh?”

“Yes, sir. It’s a brave new world.”

“Sounds like a good book title, Nurse Cynthia.”

“I think it’s been done, Doctor.”

“Well, thanks for your help. I do appreciate it. Not every day the head nurse

on a medical floor accompanies me on a consultation.” “My pleasure. You

seem to be a concerned physician, an advocate for the patient, at least. As I

remember, that’s why we all went into the healing arts.”

She turned to Mrs. Adams. “I’ll see you later, dear,” she said, patting the

elderly woman’s forehead. Still holding the nurse’s other hand with her own

wrinkled hand, Mrs. Adams kissed Cynthia’s fingers lightly, probably holding

on for her life.

I poured a cup of hospital-fresh coffee, also known as crankcase oil, and

reviewed Beatrice Adams’s chart. I sat in a doctor’s dictation area behind the

nursing station and looked at the face sheet first, being a curious sort. Her

residence was listed as Pleasant View Nursing Home, Conroe, Texas. Conroe

is a community of fifty thousand or so, about an hour north of Houston. I

noticed that a Kenneth Adams was listed as next of kin and was to be

notified in case of emergency. His phone number was prefixed by a “409”

exchange, and I therefore assumed that he was a son or a brother and lived

in Conroe as well.

Mrs. Adams was fifty-seven years old, which was young to have a flagrant

case of Alzheimer’s disease, a commonly-diagnosed malady that was due to

atrophy of the brain’s cortical matter. That’s the tissue that allows one to

recognize friends and relatives, to know the difference between going to the

bathroom in the toilet versus in your underwear, and to know when it’s

appropriate to wear clothes and when it isn’t. Alzheimer’s causes a patient to

gradually become a mental vegetable but doesn’t affect the vital organs until

the very end stages of the disease. In other words, the disease doesn’t kill

you quickly, but it makes you worse than a small child—unfortunately, a very

large and unruly child.


It can, and often does, destroy the family unit, sons and daughters

especially, who are caught between their own children and whichever parent

is affected with the disease, which makes it in some ways worse than death.

You can get over death, through grief, prayer, catharsis, and tincture of time.

Taking care of an Alzheimer’s-affected parent can be a living hell, until they

are bad enough that the patient must go to a nursing home. Then the

abandonment guilt is hell, or so my friends and patients tell me.

Mrs. Adams had been admitted to University Hospital one week before by

my friend and personal physician, Dr. James Morgenstern. I guessed that

either he had taken care of the patient or a family member in the past, or

that Dr. Frazier, physician-owner or medical director of Pleasant View Nursing

Home, had a referral relationship with Jimmy.

Mrs. Adams’s initial blood work revealed hyponatremia (low sodium),

hyperkalemia (high potassium), and a low hematocrit (anemia). Clinically,

hypotension (low blood pressure), decreased skin turgor, and oliguria

(reduced urine output) suggested a dehydration-like syndrome. For a

nursing-home patient, that could either mean poor custodial care or failure

of the patient to cooperate— refusing to drink, refusing to eat—or some

combination of the two. Neither scenario was atypical of the plight of the

elderly with a dementia-like illness.

According to Dr. Morgenstern’s history, the patient had been diagnosed with

Alzheimer’s disease six years before, at age fifty-one, which by most

standards was very young for brain deterioration without a tumor.

“Dr. Brady?” head nurse Cynthia asked, appearing beside my less-than-

comfortable dictating chair.

“Yes?”

“I’m sorry to bother you, but might I have one of your business cards?”

“Sure,” I said, handing her one from the top left pocket of my white clinical

jacket. “Don’t ever apologize for bothering me if you’re trying to send me a

patient.”

She laughed. “It’s for my mother. She has terrible arthritis.” She paused and

read the card. “You’re with the University Orthopedic Group?”

“Yes. Twenty-two years.”

“If I might ask, where did you do your training?”


“I went to med school at Baylor, then did general and orthopedic surgery

training here at the University Hospital. I then traveled to New York and

spent a year studying hip and knee replacement surgery, then came back to

Houston to the land of the free and the home of the brave.”

“Is your practice limited to a certain area? I mean, do you just see patients

with hip and knee arthritis?”

“Yes. Unless, of course, it’s an emergency situation, like one of those rare

weekends when I can’t find a young, hungry surgeon with six kids to cover

emergency room call for me.”

“Well, thanks,” she said, smiling. “I’ll be seeing you. I’ll bring my mother in.”

“Thank YOU, Cynthia. By the way, I’m curious. Why me? I would think you

see quite a few docs up here, and I would imagine that your mother has had

arthritis for years. Why now?”

Cynthia was an attractive, full-figured woman with close-cropped jet-black

hair, a woman who made the required pantsuit nursing uniform look like a

fashion statement. She looked me up and down as I sat there with Mrs.

Adams’s chart in my lap, my legs crossed, holding the strong black cooling

coffee.

“You’re wearing cowboy boots. I figure that all you need is a white hat,” she

said, turning and walking away.

Not my sharp wit, nor my kind demeanor with her patient, nor my vast

training and experience.

My boots.

About the Author:

John Bishop MD is the author of Act of Negligence: A Medical Thriller (A

Doc Brady Mystery). Dr. Bishop has led a triple life. This orthopedic surgeon

and keyboard musician has combined two of his talents into a third, as the

author of the beloved Doc Brady mystery series. Beyond applying his

medical expertise at a relatable and comprehensible level, Dr. Bishop,

through his fictional counterpart Doc Brady, also infuses his books with his

love of not only Houston and Galveston, Texas, but especially with his love

for his adored wife. Bishop’s talented Doc Brady is confident yet humble;

brilliant, yet a genuinely nice and funny guy who happens to have a knack

for solving medical mysteries. Above all, he is the doctor who will cure you

of your blues and boredom. Step into his world with the first four books of


the series, and you’ll be clamoring for more. For more information, please visit https://johnbishopauthor.com