Oath of Office
Oath of Office book cover

Oath of Office

Hardcover – February 14, 2012

Price
$13.00
Format
Hardcover
Pages
384
Publisher
St. Martin's Press
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0312587536
Dimensions
6.47 x 1.33 x 9.55 inches
Weight
1.2 pounds

Description

From Booklist A physician with a history of behavioral issues shoots and kills several people in his office before trying to take his own life. It falls to Dr. Lou Welcome, the assailants friend and former colleague, to determine why the man went on his murderous rampage, but Welcome doesn’t bargain for a conspiracy that could lead directly to the Oval Office. This is a weaker novel than Palmer’s Last Surgeon (2010), but it’s stronger than A Heartbeat Away (2011), leaving it in the midrange of Palmer’s up-and-down swing. Its characters are sturdy, but the story doesn’t have the spark that made his early work such a treat. Palmer doesn’t seem all that interested in his plot. He seems content to let it be another frequently predictable conspiracy story, although there are places where it could have veered off in a new and surprising direction. This is one of those cases where there’s nothing especially wrong with the book, but it isn’t especially memorable, either. Not a complete misfire but, from an author with undeniable talent, a disappointment. --David Pitt MICHAEL PALMER is the author of sixteen novels of medical suspense, all international bestsellers.His books have been translated into thirty-five languages. In addition ,Palmer is an associate director of the Massachusetts Medical Society Physician Health Services, devoted to helping physicians troubled by mental illness, physical illness, behavioral issues, and chemical dependency. He lives in eastern Massachusetts. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. OATH OF OFFICE (Chapter One) One hour down. Three hours to go. The afternoon was turning out just as Lou had hoped it would. Enough traffic through the ER to keep things from being boring for Emily, but nothing that would leave her with a lifetime of nightmares and therapy bills. Not that the teen wouldn’t be able to handle just about anything that came down the pike. But in an inner city emergency room—even a small satellite facility like the Eisenhower Memorial Hospital Annex, the pike, on occasion, might be carrying violence of the highest order. “Okay, Em, Mr. Schultz is being a perfect patient. Ten stitches and not a peep out of him. Two more and we’ll get him bandaged, up, and home.” “Thank you, Doc,” the man beneath the saucer-shaped light said in a raspy voice that could have cut stone. “I didn’t feel a thing. Your dad does great work, miss.” “Thank you. I know,” Emily replied. “He loves sewing my jeans when they tear, and he was always stitching up my stuffed animals, even when they weren’t ripped.” “My son’s school has Take Your Kid to Work Day, just like yours,” Schultz said, “but I’m a roofer. Three stories up with the wind blowing doesn’t seem like a great place for a nine-year-old, so Marky went to the nursing home with my wife and helped her put the trays together. What does your mom do, miss?” “My name’s Emily, Mr. Schultz,” she reminded him. “Emily Welcome. My mom’s a psychologist. Mostly couples therapy. She didn’t think her patients would enjoy having her thirteen-year-old kid sitting in on their sessions.” “I can see why she might feel that way.” “But for a second choice,” Lou said, tying off the final stitch, “I believe Mom might have chosen to send Emily up on the roof with you, rather than into this place.” In fact, the first argument he and Renee had gotten into in months was about her belief that there had to be a rule against bringing a doctor’s family member into an emergency room—even one with only three nurses, a licensed nurse’s aide, an armed security guard, a receptionist, one ER resident, and one board-certified emergency specialist. The Annex essentially served as a walk-in center to reduce the volume of the massive mother ship, just six blocks away. “Let me send her into the office with Steve,” Renee had pleaded. “Steve’s not her father. I am. Besides, how interesting could it be for her to hang out surrounded by a bunch of starched shirts and musty law tomes? I can hear her now reporting to her class: ‘I spent my day with my mother’s new husband, Steve, watching him making piles of money off a bunch of unfortunates who are suing a bunch of other unfortunates. Or you might as well send her to my brother’s office. Graham does even better at making money than Steve. Plus it might actually give him something to talk to me about besides my lack of a 401(k).’” Even though Lou had ultimately won that round, he had to admit that as usual, Renee had a point, and he had told her so when he apologized for sounding like a jerk. For whatever reason, he had been feeling sorry for himself on the day the forms were due back to the Carlisle School. And despite some misgivings of his own about exposing Em to the raw underbelly of D.C., he had decided to turn Take Your Student to Work Day into Little Bighorn. Two hours and thirty-five minutes to go. So far, so good. Despite a steady stream of patients, Gerhard Schultz was about as challenging a trauma case as the Eisenhower Annex typically saw. Lou missed the action in the main ER, but in his past life, he had squirreled away enough action points to star in a video game. For now, part-time shifts at the old Annex would do just fine. Not surprisingly, the patients and the staff loved Emily to pieces. There was a grace and composure surrounding her that won people over almost as quickly as did her dark, unassuming beauty. Thirteen going on thirty. People loved to say that about their kids—especially their daughters. But the old saw, though true in Emily’s case, invariably brought Lou a pang. It was hard not to believe that in many ways he had robbed those seventeen years from her. “Okay, Mr. Schultz,” he said, “one of the nurses will be in to dress your arm in just a few minutes. No work until next Monday. If you need a note, the nurse will put one together and I’ll sign it. Last tetanus shot?” “A year or so ago. Ixa0… umxa0… tend to bump into sharp things.” “Sharp, rusty things,” Lou corrected. “We’ll give you a wound-care sheet.” “Your dad’s a good man,” the roofer said again. “I been around a lot of doctors. I can tell.” “I’ve been around a lot of fathers, and I can tell, too,” Emily said. Lou wouldn’t have been surprised if her smile had healed Schultz’s nasty gash then and there, in addition to curing any illness that might have been lurking inside him. Looking utterly perfect in her sky blue scrubs, she walked back to the doctor’s lounge, shoulder to shoulder with her father. “Well, that was fun,” she said when he had settled her in on the sofa, around a cup of hot chocolate from the Keurig machine. “You think you might like to be a doctor?” Lou asked, remembering that he could have answered that question in the affirmative when he was four. “I suppose anything’s possible. You and Mom are certainly good role models.” “She’s a terrific shrink.” “It’s hard for you, isn’t it.” “What’s hard?” Lou asked, knowing perfectly well what she was talking about. “The divorce.” “It wasn’t what I wanted, if that’s what you mean.” “People get remarried to their exes. It happens on TV all the time.” “Em, Mom is remarried. You got that, bucko? Add me to the mix, and you get a sitcom that would compete with Modern Family.” Emily chewed on her lip and picked at a fingernail. “I’m glad you won out and brought me in with you today,” she said finally. “I didn’t win anything. It’s Take Your Kid to Work Day, and you’re my kid. You always were, and you always will be.” Lou crossed to the door and glanced over at the two new arrivals in the waiting room—a Latina woman and the extremely ancient man he assumed was her father. The fellow’s color was poor, and he was working for each breath. “Check an oh-two sat on him, Roz,” he said to the nurse, “and have Gordon start going over him right away.” “Thanks. I’m glad you feel that way,” Emily was saying. “What would you say if I told you I was losing interest in school?” Lou narrowly missed spraying out his coffee. “You’re, like, tops in your class. You get all A’s.” “I’m looking out the window and daydreaming a lot. That can’t be anyone’s idea of an education.” “You don’t go to school to get an education.” Emily immediately perked up. “What do you mean?” “Call it Welcome’s Law. You go to school for the degree. Anything you learn while you’re there is gravy. Her eyes were sparkling now. “Go on.” “Every single day that you manage to stay in school translates into ten thousand people in the world that you won’t have to take BS from in your life. The more degrees you have, the fewer little, small-minded people there will be who have big power over you. I stayed in school long enough to get an M.D. degree. Now, nobody can boss me around.” “What about Dr. Filstrup at the Physician Wellness Office?” Lou groaned. In terms of insight and verbal sparring, Emily was her mother’s daughter. So much for Welcome’s Law. Lou’s affiliation with the PWO went back nine years—to the day when his medical license was suspended for self-prescribing amphetamines. He had always been a heavier-than-average drinker, but speed, which he took to handle the sleep-deprivation of working two moonlighting jobs, quickly brought him to his knees. Enter the PWO, an organization devoted to helping doctors with mental illness, physical illness, substance abuse, and behavioral problems. The PWO director arranged for an immediate admission to a rehab facility in Georgia, and kept in close contact with Lou’s caseworkers and counselors until his discharge six months later. After that, a PWO monitor met with him weekly, then monthly, and supervised his recovery and urine screens for alcohol and other drugs of abuse. After a spotless year, his license was restored and he returned to work at Eisenhower Memorial. Three years after that, he was hired as the second of two PWO monitors. For the next year, things went perfectly. Then Walter Filstrup was brought in by the PWO board to head up the program. “You know, bucko,” Lou said to his daughter, “sometimes you’re too smart for your own good.” Although he seldom went out of his way to discuss his job frustrations with his child, neither was Lou ever one to measure his words. And the kid was a sponge. “All right,” he said. “Consider my current position with PWO the exception that proves the law. Now, let’s get out there and see some patients. You ready to stay in school?” Emily cocked her head thoughtfully. “For the moment,” she said. “That’s all I can ask for. So, let’s not fall behind. In the ER business, you never know when something’s going to come out of left field and slam you against the wall.” OATH OF OFFICE. Copyright 2012 by Michael Palmer. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • Michael Palmer, the
  • New York Times
  • bestselling author of
  • A Heartbeat Away
  • and
  • The Last
  • Surgeon
  • brings us a shocking new thriller at the crossroads of politics and medicine.
  • What if a well respected doctor inexplicably goes on a murderous rampage?
  • When Dr. John Meacham goes on a shooting spree the office, his business partner, staff, and two patients are killed in the bloodbath.  Then Meacham turns the gun on himself.
  • The blame falls on Dr. Lou Welcome.  Welcome worked with Meacham years before as a counselor after John's medical license had been revoked for drug addiction.  Lou knew that John was an excellent doctor and deserved to be practicing medicine and fought hard for his license to be restored.  After hearing the news of the violent outburst, Lou is in shock like everyone else, but mostly he's incredulous.  And when he begins to look into it further, the terrifying evidence he finds takes him down a path to an unspeakable conspiracy that seems to lead directly to the White House and those in the highest positions of power.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(271)
★★★★
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(226)
★★★
15%
(135)
★★
7%
(63)
23%
(208)

Most Helpful Reviews

✓ Verified Purchase

"It's not the oath that makes us believe the man, but the man the oath." Aeschylus

When stressed out Dr. John Meacham goes on a shooting spree, killing a number of his patients and fellow employees, Dr. Lou Welcome is blamed.

Lou had been overseeing his friend, Dr. Meacham's progress at Physicians Wellness. This organization counsels and attempts to help doctors with psychological problems, resulting in their loss of anger. They also counsel doctors who over medicate themselves with drugs and alcohol.

As the story progresses, we observe Lou's compassionate nature while a number of other characters exhibit unexplained anger that seems to take control of their body for a time, and then, if they survive their aggression, the anger seems to go away. Afterward the person seems almost unaware of what happened. We witness a number of tragic events due to this anger. Lou tries to find the cause. He goes to the Chief of Police in King's Ridge but the chief tells Lou that he doesn't have any real evidence to back his claims.

He meets Dr. Darlene Mallory, the First Lady of the United States. They form a bond together, attempting to find answers to this mystery.

The characters are realistically portrayed. Lou's thirteen-year-old daughter, Emily, is a charmer. The author brings Lou and Emily to life at moments such as when they are playing monopoly. In reality, Lou is using the game to keep Emily occupied while he questions her about herself and her life with her mother and step-father.

How many parents don't know how to communicate with teenagers and this method of keeping a teenager active with something while asking questions is a very good lesson.

The plot is laid out nicely with some interesting surprises. I found the book entertaining and recommend it to readers who enjoy medical thrillers and good suspense.

Note: I received a copy of this novel for an honest review.
22 people found this helpful
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Faced-paced read for an adrenaline rush

If ever there was a cautionary tale against genetic food modification, Oath of Office is it. The author combines medical mystery with political corruption in a suspenseful, fast-paced thriller that is a real page turner. I was stepping outside my usual genres by picking up this book, and I'm ever so glad that I did. I particularly enjoy books that take me outside of my realm of knowledge and experience and teach me something new while entertaining me. I found that Oath of Office did that very well. I also liked the main characters a great deal and appreciated that they had baggage. Palmer was able to make doctors and politicians into people to whom the reader could relate. This book had high speed car chases, shootouts, medical traumas, radiated termites, murder, and romance. It came together in a plot that was frighteningly believable yet surprising and nearly seamless. I enjoyed it immensely and highly recommend it for a quick read with a bonus adrenaline rush.
10 people found this helpful
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Corny!

If you read the book, you will know why I called this book "corny." But I really thought it was. Very much. There's lots of action and convoluted ideas and circling around Palmer's premise. I found very little about "medicine" in this book, although a few characters are MD's and the is a hospital setting. Silly "romance" theme, forced "political" themes. Easy reading, OK but value, no. Not well written, not complex characters. Airplane read, perhaps.
If you like (semi-) thrilers, you might like this, but as to the real plot and story, it was outlandish. Possible-in-real-life? Perhaps. But it was just too much for me.
9 people found this helpful
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What makes people in an area suddenly turn against and hurt their friends?

I have read most of Michael Palmer's books wondering how he could add more excitement and deeper involvement than in his preceding books. "Oath Of Office" is no exception as I thoroughly enjoyed the entire book wondering while advancing through the book how the author can be so knowledgeable as he delves into so many subjects in various fields and subjects? The story begins as Dr. John Meacham has a huge verbal fight with a patient, certainly not the type of thing he would normally do. As that patient stormed out of his office he started thinking beyond the normal box that all those in the office would give him trouble reporting the incident to the hospital and other boards. He decided he would just stop any of them from hurting his future and started shooting and killing any patients in the office and waiting room, his own staff, and any doctors in the immediate vicinity, followed by shooting himself. Dr. Lou Welcome was a good friend of Dr. John Meacham and couldn't believe that this man could take the actions he had taken with such finality to everyone involved. Dr. Meacham had barely survived the bullet he put in his head and despite all the medical attention he was given, including some from Lou, he didn't make it.

The wife of the President of the United States, Darlene Mallory, was a good friend of the Secretary of Agriculture, Russell Evans, and was hurt that he had been caught with a hooker and had to resign his cabinet job. She needed to find out if the story was true or not. Their meeting was done secretly, planned well with the help of one of the Secret Service agents assigned to cover Mrs. Mallory, Victor. Victor was a very good agent but also was top notch at helping the presidents' wife do almost anything she wished to do, outright or secretly. Lou was beginning to suspect something was going on affecting the minds of some causing them to do some outlandish and not near normal activities that had started with his friend killing so many and Dr. Meacham's wife not acting normal also.

Lou had been taking boxing lessons from a good friend, Cap, and had for some years. This helped Lou stay in good physical shape and he loved the action and boy, did he need some relaxation now after all he had been through the past few days. He and Cap worked out and had a good chance to talk. The town of Kings Ridge was the closest populated area and Lou went there to meet Chief Stone, Chief of the Kings Ridge Police force. Lou told Stone that he was suspicious of some strange things going on in the area with people doing and saying some strange things, some things from their local hospital, the local doctors, and the actions of Dr. Meacham. The chief took note but did not feel there was anything wrong.

Action really picks up even more so involving all of the above, the President of the United States who was involved in a reelection campaign so did not have much time for close friends or his wife, Lou's friends and associates, Secret Service agents, and many more. As I said, Michael Palmer has spun a great tale in this book and to try to tell you any more than I have would ruin your enjoyment while reading the book. The writing is excellent, the plots are great, and the characters are very real. When the book gets into genetically modified goods, we enter a current problem facing our world right now. How dangerous are these GE products?
8 people found this helpful
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Is our food supply safe?

Michael Palmer's book is as much a novel as it is a political / medical statement. Palmer weaves a good story while expounding on the concept of genetically altered food and how while it is the hope of the future it is possibly the downfall of mankind.

Dr. Lou Welcome works as an emergency room doctor and also something like a probation officer for doctors who have had their license suspended at one time or another because of drug or alcohol abuse. He himself is a recoverying abuser and so he knows the temptations and anger issues that his fellow doctors face.

The book starts with a bizzare mass murder, bizzare because it makes no sense and is driven by an illogical lapse in judgment by one of Dr. Welcomes parolee's. Welcome does not believe that he has made a fatal mistake in judgment of this doctor. He does not believe the doctor would have acted this way without a trigger that caused the snap in his brain.

So, while Dr. Welcome himself is put on leave of absence for his lack of judgment he delves into the situation to try and solve the question, why did his friend act this way? This leads him on a road to genetically altered corn. The corn is being changed at the DNA level and it provides for more ears of corn on stronger stalks to increase the yield of corn per acre to 300 bushels from the normal 100.

As someone who lives in farming country this novel makes some sense. I drive by many fields that have signs posted telling the other farmers that this field is planted with a new variant of seed to help enhance the yields. It also is to distinguish which fields have these mutant seeds so that the companies and farmers can keep an eye on the product and see whether it is better or worse than before.

So, where does the President of the United States come into the picture of this novel? Well, our president in this novel is a man whose approval ratings have dropped into the low 30's. He is in danger of not being re-elected, at least it's a danger to him. As such what will he do to bolster his ratings, get American's back to work (i.e. improve the job market) and also help the world's ability to provide food for their starving people.

The novel will keep you reading. It is well written in the sense of providing good character development, intrigue, suspense and weaving a variety of areas of interest into one novel. Where else can you get emergency room medicine, politics, dectective thriller, the science of altering foods, entomology and last but not least, boxing!

Oh and throw in a growing romance between the First Lady of the United States and Dr. Welcome and you get another story line.

All in all I enjoyed the read and am very grateful for a complimentary copy from St. Martin's Press and author Michael Palmer. Thank you for allowing me to read and review your work. I certainly will be looking forward to reading other books that Michael has written.

Enjoy!
5 people found this helpful
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Not very believable

As a botanist, I found this book to be really bad. As an avid reader, I found it to be worse than that. The plot concept was doable (without the bugs). Genetically modified plants are a reality. If the author had gone for a more realistic process than shooting DNA from a ray gun, the story had a slim chance of holding together. But combine the ray gun with the President of the US, the story just falls off the cliff. The First Lady traipsing around to meet anonymous men, climbing out of a bathroom window, then fooling the Secret Service with a body double, ah c'mon.!

This is an easy, mindless read. It coulda been a contenda, but failed. Too much trite, not enough Crichton.
3 people found this helpful
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Wonderful

Great
1 people found this helpful
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Typical Palmer

Interesting read from start to finish. Palmer always is worth the money spent. Story line is great all the way
1 people found this helpful
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Surprised myself

This was the first of Michael Palmer's books that I was able to conclude correctly about 75% of the book. Never have been able to do that before. Was it still a good read, absolutely . Just surprised that I wasn't surprised. Could have been just me, and I have read all his books and happened to be in a state where I was looking for clues and caught them. Still would have bought and read this should I have seen this in a review.
1 people found this helpful
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Excellent Read!

Dr. Lou Welcome had been to his own personal hell and back. Addicted to booze, his license revoked, losing his wife and nearly his daughter; Lou had nothing else to lose but millions to gain if he could just stay sober. A friend named Cap helped as his AA sponsor and boxing buddy. Due to his lapse Welcome was committed to helping other docs who were suffering the same issues. Through a group called Physician Wellness Office, Lou shores his stories and helps. Or so he thought.
Dr. John Meacham, someone Lou had been working with and who was showing great strides, suddenly kills his staff, patients in the waiting room and, ultimately dies himself. What went wrong? He lived in King's Ridge, a small area outside of Washington, DC catering to well-to-do folk. He seemed to have snapped and he wasn't alone. In the White House, the First Lady was trying to keep control as the President began what was becoming a daily tirade. He was running for re-election and was passing on all appearances to sit in the Oval Office and "stew." The patient who originally set off Meacham's rampage because she wouldn't lose weight; gives herself a tummy tuck with disastrous results. Something's not right.
What do all these folks for different lifestyles and locales have in common? I was as surprised as you will be when you read the end of this book. Any Michael Palmer book will grab you and hold on until the end of his newest story. This one does a better job than some because, believe me, once you start this you'll want to finish it and also not want to because it's that good.
1 people found this helpful