The Last Surgeon
The Last Surgeon book cover

The Last Surgeon

Hardcover – February 16, 2010

Price
$9.62
Format
Hardcover
Pages
373
Publisher
St. Martin's Press
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0312587499
Dimensions
6.49 x 1.35 x 9.58 inches
Weight
1.25 pounds

Description

From Publishers Weekly In this anemic medical thriller from bestseller Palmer ( The Second Opinion ), former trauma surgeon Dr. Nick Garrity, who suffers from PTSD as the result of a suicide attack on his field hospital in Afghanistan, is now in charge of the Helping Hands RV, a mobile clinic that plies the streets of Baltimore offering medical aid to the homeless. Meanwhile, a high-priced hit man starts to commit a series of murders, his first victim being Belle Coates, a nurse in Charlotte, N.C. When Belle's sister, Jillian, who lives in Virginia, searches for her sister's killer, she finds a connection to Nick. Several missing homeless men lead everyone to a massive plot involving high-level politicians and a secret CIA program. The action is all fairly predictable, the characters off-the-shelf, and the writing, if not exactly purple, at least mauve: A guttural, primal scream exploded from Nick's throat as he crouched by the body. 250,000 first printing. (Feb.) Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. From Booklist Palmer’s best novel in years is a highly suspenseful story that begins with a murder staged to look like a suicide and ends with the exposure of a far-reaching conspiracy. The three central players are Jillian Coates, a nurse who refuses to believe her sister would kill herself; Nick Garrity, a physician still haunted by the disappearance of his best friend three years ago; and Franz Koller, a ruthless hired killer who has several victims to dispatch, only none of them can look like murder. Palmer cleverly teams up Nick and Jillian, uniting them in a common purpose: to find out how Jillian’s dead sister and Nick’s missing friend seem to have come in contact with one another. Palmer keeps his two leads—and us, too—in the dark for a good portion of the book, dispensing the occasional tantalizing hint of some horrible secret lying just below the surface. When we discover the truth behind the mystery, we’re shocked and exhilarated and bewildered, all at the same time. Palmer has always spun a good yarn, but this one is more compelling and features more engaging characters than some of his recent efforts. --David Pitt Michael Palmerxa0writes internationally bestselling novels of medical suspense, including A Heartbeat Away, The First Patient, The Second Opinion, The Sisterhood and Critical Judgment .xa0 His books have been translated into thirty-five languages. Palmer earned his bachelor’s degree at Wesleyan University, and he attended medical school at Case Western Reserve University. He trained in internal medicine at Boston City and Massachusetts General Hospitals. He spent twenty years as a full-time practitioner of internal and emergency medicine. In addition to his writing, 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.xa0 He lives in eastern Massachusetts. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. THE LAST SURGEON (Chapter One) "Nick, Nick, throw it here! Come on, let it go!" Nick Garrity cocked his right arm and lofted a perfect spiral to the gangly youth waiting across the yard. The boy, who would have been happy to keep playing until midnight, gathered in the pass effortlessly and immediately threw it back. "Okay, that's it, Reggie. I gotta take Chance for a run and then get ready for work." "One more pass. Just one more. After dinner I'll go over to your place and take Chance out. Promise." Through the gloom of what was going to be a stormy evening, Nick could feel the boy's energy and see his enthusiasm. A drug-addicted mother, a long-gone father, time in juvenile detention for a crime no one seemed willing to talk about, seven years in a sequence of foster homes, and the kid was still upbeat and great to be around. How in the hell do you do it? Nick wondered. For most of the week, Nick's mood had been as somber as the prestorm sky. And as usual, there was no reason--at least not on the surface--to explain it. A night in the Helping Hands RV would improve his flagging morale. It usually did. He made a final throw, handled as easily as most of the others, and then motioned for Reggie to come in. "Come on, big guy. I've got to leave soon." "So, where're you goin' tonight, Nick? D.C.?" "I think so. Junie keeps track of that." "Can I come?" "It's a school night, and you promised to deal with Second Chance. Remember, don't let him off the leash or he'll see a squirrel and chase it to the moon. Greyhounds are bred to chase little furry animals. Use the long leash if you're going to throw him his Frisbee." "How about I go with you tomorrow?" "We'll see." "I never get to do anything exciting." "Yes, you do. Staying out of trouble is exciting." Reggie punched Nick playfully in the side. Nick put his arm around the youth's shoulders and walked with him to the back door. The modest one-family, with three bedrooms and a finished basement, was located in the Carroll Park section of Baltimore. Nick had lived there with June Wright and her husband, Sam, for a few months before renting the first floor of a refurbished two-family down the street, close to the park. Not long after the move, Reggie Smith, now fourteen, had taken over the basement bedroom. A sequence of kids were constantly coming and going through the Wright household, including the six-year-old Levishefsky twins, Celeste and Bethany, who had been there for almost a year now. If one looked up "saint" in any encyclopedia, pictures of Junie, a sixty-year-old nurse, and Sam, a DPW worker, might well be there. Since Junie would be working the RV tonight with Nick, her husband would be doing the cooking. The couple had children of their own, and grandchildren as well, but at every stage of their lives together, they had added foster children to the mix. The Helping Hands RV was parked on the street by the Wrights' house. It was an aging thirty-four-foot mobile home converted into a general medical clinic. Nick loped past it on the way to his apartment. At six-foot-one, with broad shoulders and a solid chest, he still moved like the running back he had been in college before an illegal block had taken out most of his anterior cruciate ligament. Now the repaired knee was serviceable, but hardly ready to absorb a major hit. Nick's father, once a football player himself, was a retired GP. The option of moving to the family home in Oregon was always available to Nick, but had never been one he had considered seriously. In general, his parents were decent, understanding people, though not about their only son. There was no reason to expect they would be. In that same encyclopedia, at least in their library, his picture might have been inserted next to the word "disappointment." "This is our son, trauma surgeon Dr. Nick Garrity," they had introduced him on more than one occasion during the years when he was their golden child, "and this is his sister." Nearing his apartment, Nick heard the low rumble of thunder in the distance, sounding like a truck engine slowly coming to life. He tensed at the sound. He always would. Nick's duplex would never be featured in Architectural Digest , but that was fine by him. Oak floors, a variety of posters from the local art store, plus curtains and a few plants gave the place an airy, comfortable feel. He was bent over beside the mail slot, scooping up circulars and bills from the floor, when he was hit from behind hard enough to drive his forehead into the door. He turned, knowing what to expect. Second Chance sat, head cocked, panting around the red Frisbee in his mouth. "I'm running behind," Nick said, rubbing at his forehead, half expecting blood. "Reggie's going to take you out." The dog pointed his snout toward the door and shifted his behind. "No go, pal. Gotta shower." They had been a team for almost two years, dating back to the first and only time Nick had ever been to a dog track. Lost in thoughts about Sarah, he had been on an aimless drive that ended at a casino in West Virginia. After an hour losing at the slots, he wandered over to the adjacent Tri-State track. He was in the midst of a particularly difficult time, when self-destructive thoughts had once again been seeping into his mind. Damn PTSD. Second Chance, a long shot in the fifth race and a natural bet for Nick, had been well in the lead when he suddenly slowed dramatically. Twenty yards from the finish, he was trampled by seven dogs as they passed over and around him, and was left nearly motionless in the dust. An hour later, Nick and the greyhound had claimed one another at the adoption tent, where the dog's sleazy trainer tried to convince the Army trauma surgeon that Chance's uneven, lurching gait was due to nothing more than a minor concussion. Back home, the "concussion" responded dramatically when Nick, assisted by Reggie, Sam, and two Army buddies, cleaned densely packed dirt from each of the greyhound's ear canals. Of all the therapies Nick had tried in his battle against post-traumatic stress disorder, Second Chance's presence in his life was the most consistently effective. There were days when Nick was able to fit in some calisthenics and weights before going out on the road, but tonight, after playing catch with Reggie, there was just no time. He showered and was dressing in his usual work uniform, jeans and a faded work shirt, when he glanced over at a printout he had taped to the wall beside his bed listing the ten levels of SUDS--the Subjective Units of Disturbance Scale he used to estimate his mood at any given time. This evening seemed like a five: Moderately upset, uncomfortable. Unpleasant feelings are still manageable with some effort. Progress, that's all he and Dr. Deems had decreed he should shoot for--just a little progress each day. Days like today, even after all these years, it was difficult to tell whether or not he was succeeding. He spent a minute patting and scratching Chance, and then pulled on a Windbreaker and headed out the door. The thunder was louder now. THE LAST SURGEON. Copyright 2010 by Michael Palmer. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • The New York Times bestselling author and master of medical suspense delivers another shocker of a thriller filled with insider details and a terrifying psychopath Four murders. Three accidents. Two suicides. One left€¦ THE LAST SURGEON Michael Palmer€™s latest novel pits a flawed doctor against a ruthless psychopath, who has made murder his art form. Dr. Nick Garrity, a vet suffering from PTSD€”post traumatic stress disorder€”spends his days and nights dispensing medical treatment from a mobile clinic to the homeless and disenfranchised in D.C. and Baltimore. In addition, he is constantly on the lookout for his war buddy Umberto Vasquez, who was plucked from the streets by the military four years ago for a secret mission and has not been seen since. Psych nurse Gillian Coates wants to find her sister€™s killer. She does not believe that Belle Coates, an ICU nurse, took her own life, eve

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(164)
★★★★
25%
(136)
★★★
15%
(82)
★★
7%
(38)
23%
(125)

Most Helpful Reviews

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The Last Surgeon

"The Last Surgeon" by Michael Palmer is one fast-paced, action-packed thriller that had me not wanting to put the book down. Dr. Nick Garrity has been searching for a long lost war buddy when he meets Gillian Coates, whose sister Belle seemingly committed suicide, but Gillian thinks otherwise. A comic book clue "Nick Fury", led Gillian to Nick and together they find clues of a much bigger conspiracy. Soon they are on the hit-list and must not only find out who is behind it all, but keep themselves and others around them alive. Mr. Palmer has written a novel that kept me up into the middle of the night because it was that entertaining.
12 people found this helpful
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Phoning it in

I read The Second Opinion and the Fifth Vial and thought that they were passable. I like them less after having read this miserable piece of garbage.

The Last Surgeon is just plain dreadful, with cardboard characters, including a pathological killer who has a tedious running internal monologue congratulating himself on his expertise, a tragic hero, Dr. Nick "Fury" Garrity who is traumatized and oh-so-sensitive, and also quite the Mr. Perfect, and a love interest, Jillian, who is, of course, stunningly beautiful and Ms. Perfect; a caring nurse who is devoted to her dead sister that of course she raised when their parents died.

The plot just sort of lies around and drools, involving a search for an old buddy who went missing (Mr. Perfect) and the true killer of the sister (Ms. Perfect). Nothing too compelling there, no surprises really, no clever twists. Same old conspiracy and brainwashing stuff that you got sick of back when Mission Impossible was still on the air. The search is punctuated by occasional, repetitive fight scenes where the good guy gets slammed into something, usually a wall. The dialogue is no better than a string of pre-teen Facebook status updates. Plus, this book is crawling with adverbs, so many that I wanted to scream, a little like this: He slowly, gently paddled out on the evenly calm water, saying calmly and kindly to himself, "Nicely done."

It didn't help that narrator John Bedford Lloyd read it like a drunken kindergarten teacher's assistant.

I review only audiobooks, and I welcome your comments.
9 people found this helpful
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A real disappointment.

This book was disgustingly violent and tedious. I had to put it down after 200 pages. The story goes nowhere. I liked Mr. Palmer's earlier work. He is resting on past laurels.
8 people found this helpful
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I've liked him in the past but this stinks

I like a good story and that's what I got in the past with Michael Palmer. This one smells! I don't know if he got lazy but... His characters are usually a bit wooden and his romantic bits are hard to swallow but usually the plot sucks me in. I got to a point near the end and I ended up throwing it against the wall.

Characters in the plot discover that 8 people have died - obviously murdered but disguised to look like a natural death. The main character leaves and comes back to find two of the people, that have been working on finding the murderer, are dead. He wonders why the one slit the other's throat and then shot himself in the head. Palmer has created a hero that is `tea-bagger stupid`. That is when I gave up.
6 people found this helpful
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I just didn't get it

This book was a disjointed read that tried to wrap too many characters into the central plot, said plot being hard to even understand. I struggled just to finish it, the first disappointing Palmer book I've encountered.
3 people found this helpful
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Another Tremendous Thriller from Palmer

What a great read. I sat down to read it in the afternoon when I had a few hours to spare, and THE LAST SURGEON ended up keeping me up well past my bedtime that same night. A terrifyingly plausible plot, well-drawn characters...Palmer is the master of the thriller.
3 people found this helpful
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Hannibal Lecter meets his match!!

I'm not sure I've ever read a book that scares me...but I have now! I've always said I couldn't find a movie to scare me but I've *wanted* to be scared. I had some crazy nightmares while reading this book but they were also interesting! (insane, I know!)

Jillian's sister is dead and everyone says she committed suicide. Jillian knows better...she believes she was murdered. Jillian spends a great deal of time devoted to finding her sister's killer. Along the way, pieces begin to fall into place about what really did happen.

There are some slight political undertones in this book. The murderer has some links to Al Qeida and references are made to 9/11. However, this shouldn't effect the reader in enjoying this book.

Expect to stay on the edge of your seat while reading this fast paced novel full of suspense, murder, lies, and romance. Oh, and don't forget about the medical references for those of us who are junkies!

Michael Palmer has created a character who is suffering from PTSD, a very common disorder in our world today. It was interesting to learn about the SUD score (mine varies from day to day from a 5 to a 7!) I appreciate the research that has gone into crafting this phenomenal book.

My thanks to Michael Palmer for providing a review copy. Look for The Last Surgeon to hit shelves on Feb. 16!!
2 people found this helpful
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good read

The book is a page turning read. The characters are interesting and educating along the way. A couple of twists keep you turning the page in the fact finding adventure of the lead character. Characters are easy to visualize as well as identify with if you have had similar medical experiences in the hospital. The elitest attitude of some doctors can be recognized by all but the family dynamics can also be understood. Keeps you coming back to see just what new turn will happen in the family of smart and dysfunctional family. I feel this is more a mystery/doctor detective story in a medical setting vs a medical thriller. A book most can relate to and identify with. Will look for more of Michael Palmer's books you can clearly see in his writing the understanding and trials of dealing with asperger's[[ASIN:B002KQ6FE2 The Second Opinion]]
1 people found this helpful
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another great work of literature

All I have to say is that it is another great book by the master of medical thrillers, Michael Palmer. I am down to the last 10 cahpters of the book I would have to say that it is even better than second opinion.
1 people found this helpful
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Great Mystery/Thriller

There were many twists and turns in this medical mystery/thriller which kept me reading until far into the night. The book was hard to put down. Great book! Very enjoyable. It kept you guessing until the end. Highly recommend it.
1 people found this helpful