Great Cook story: gripping suspense, humor, & ethics issues...
We've read all of Cook's medical "thrillers" (even his Egyptian mystery, the "Sphinx"), and would argue that some are a lot better than others. But along comes "Seizure", just possibly his best ever! A current affairs-type premise finds two intellectual doctors trying to save from impending financial ruin their stem-cell research company with a promising technology to grow disease-curing cells. They approach a US Senator to help stop a bill to outlaw their procedures, only to learn he has Parkinson's disease and proposes using himself as an experiment -- completely illegal of course! To add an incredible twist to the idea, he wants the DNA necessary to come from the Shroud of Turin (implications, to use Christ's DNA). What happens therafter is a roller coaster ride of trials and tribulations for our leading characters, with finally the operation on the senator at first glance a success. As yet another interesting touch, Cook reprises the evil doctors from "Shock" who fled the U.S. to re-open the Wingate Clinic (from that story) in the Bahamas to skirt federal medical laws.
There's much more than a fun story to captivate readers with this novel. The discussions of the Shroud, apparently proven years ago to be a fraud, were intriguing and will probably stimulate new interest in just where and how the famous relic came to be. The scene where the senator meets with a Cardinal to "negotiate" getting a sample of the shroud was one of the most humorous we've read in a long time. Lastly, the ongoing ethics of the human experiment, and whether the type of research described in the story should be banned or not is a central theme for which the author has serious positions to unfold, even elaborating on what he thinks is right in an author's note at the end. Cook also admitted his fascination with learning so much about the Shroud and refers us to other books on that subject should we care to pursue it.
Robin Cook often grabs us with a provocative premise but then sometimes peters out. In this book, the action, the interaction of the characters, and the entertaining and amusing side issues all wrap up into a fine summertime read -- don't miss it!