⭐⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ Review: Fever by Robin Cook
“What if your child’s leukemia wasn’t random—but revenge?”
The Plot (Spoilers Ahead):
Charles Martel, a widowed cancer researcher, is finally reconnecting with his 12-year-old daughter, Michelle, when she develops bruises and fatigue. It’s leukemia, the doctors say. Acute. Aggressive. And already spreading.
Charles is devastated—but not convinced this is just bad luck. He begins digging for environmental causes and discovers something terrifying: Michelle may have been exposed to benzene, a known carcinogen, dumped into the local river by a chemical plant affiliated with the powerful AmeriCare Hospital, where Charles also happens to work.
When he publicly challenges the diagnosis and questions conventional treatment (like radiation), Charles is stonewalled. His bosses demand silence. The hospital wants control of Michelle’s care. The chemical company wants him to shut up. But Charles goes rogue, removing Michelle from the hospital and seeking alternative treatments, all while unraveling the industrial cover-up and taking on corporate giants.
The stakes: one sick child. A corrupt hospital system. And a very angry pharmaceutical executive with everything to lose.
The Medical Issue Examined:
Cook blends personal tragedy with political commentary here, diving into:
Leukemia and cancer treatments in children
Environmental carcinogens and toxic waste exposure
The ethical quagmire of radiation vs. experimental therapy
Corporate medical conflicts of interest—what happens when hospitals and polluters are the same entity?
It’s Erin Brockovich meets House M.D., with a heavy dose of righteous fatherly fury.
Characters:
Dr. Charles Martel – Brilliant, grieving, and absolutely unwilling to lose another loved one. He’s flawed (prone to rage, emotionally detached), but completely committed to Michelle. Cook’s most paternal and personally motivated lead.
Michelle Martel – Not just a patient, but a person. She’s curious, scared, and a heartbreaking window into the human cost of negligence.
Breur Chemical Executives – Your standard-issue blend of greed, denial, and casual child endangerment. Special mention to the CEO who basically wants to gaslight an entire river.
Writing Style:
This one’s emotionally charged, more so than Cook’s usual procedural tone. There’s rage in the prose—personal, environmental, medical. Dialogue moves quickly, and exposition comes in layered bursts as Charles uncovers how deeply the corruption runs.
It’s both a medical thriller and an eco-thriller, with a fast pace but surprisingly tender moments between Charles and Michelle.
Final Word:
Fever is one of Cook’s most personal-feeling novels, showing the vulnerability of patients in a profit-driven system, especially when that patient is a child. It asks: What would you do to save your kid—and what if fighting back means losing your job, your freedom, and your reputation?
Brutal in premise, but grounded in love and principle, this one lingers. It’s not just about beating cancer—it’s about beating the system that let it happen.
Read if you like:
Grieving-dad-turns-detective stories
Eco-medical thrillers
Hospital corruption with a child’s life at stake