The fourth book in the exciting City Hospital series.
City Hospital: One busy hospital, five medical students, plenty of drama...
Join five young trainee medics on the wards of City Hospital: student doctor Gordy, student nurses Mark and Bella, student radiographer Suzie and student physiotherapist Karlene. The friends share a house, and the ups and downs of being a medical student in a busy teaching hospital.
In City Hospital Book 4: Emergency...
Bella gets involved with a young man with a drug problem. Getting close to him and his family puts her own life in danger.
Mark is in love. But a mystery illness threatens the relationship before it has really begun.
Karlene suspects a patient is suffering from domestic abuse. But will the woman accept Karlene's help?
Keith Miles (born 1940) is an English author, who writes under his own name and also historical fiction and mystery novels under the pseudonym Edward Marston. He is known for his mysteries set in the world of Elizabethan theater. He has also written a series of novels based on events in the Domesday Book.
The protagonist of the theater series is Nicholas Bracewell, the bookholder of a leading Elizabethan theater company (in an alternate non-Shakespearean universe).
The latter series' two protagonists are the Norman soldier Ralph Delchard and the former novitiate turned lawyer Gervase Bret, who is half Norman and half Saxon.
His latest series of novels are based in early Victorian period and revolve around the fictional railway detective Inspector Robert Colbeck.
After reading the first five books in this series I've come to the conclusion that this author has no idea off hospitals and training given. Most of the five trainees wouldn't survive a week in a real hospital and more than likely not be accepted in the first place! The storylines are pathetic and are so awful that they are like reading car crash material, definitely not recommended
Very trashy British series, set in a hospital. I read them when I was 12 or 13; they're possibly for older readers - or at least they feature older characters - but they were just so bad that 12 was the right age at which to read them ;)