Well, this is a real departure for me. Usually I can guess within the first 80 or 90 pages; which genre, and in particular, which action category or level of interest and depth of characters a book will take.
Not this time.
Because it started out like your "normal" medical who-dun-it and particularly of the serial killer sub-category. In fact, it was so "best seller" depth and quickness to action of dysfunction that I almost ditched the book at about 110. But then I didn't. And I was sure glad I stuck with it.
Because it becomes much more.
It leaves me guessing, and googling info, actually. Who wrote this? Michael Palmer, who has passed- or his son? Daniel Palmer is BETTER. That's just my opinion.
This one became a 4.5 star. Just clipped a five. Miss for me, primarily because of the melodramatic death scenes.
But I LOVED the honesty of hospitalization as it is run presently. Not just USA, either. And the admins of other large, large facility organizations of profit and non-profit, not far behind. Cut the overruns by eliminating the longest and most impossible. So that the probable serendipity outcome becomes acceptable, regardless if it is difficult to view. Or experience.
The scientific and drug related material! OUTSTANDING! And our lady doctor became a woman of true depth. Paul, Trevor, Jordan and some of the others crack open in full core, as well. Not just doers, but what they are and how they think.
And I guessed the right gender but the wrong person as the core perp. Good medical mystery! Long read, but worth the fall-outs for tech and chemical nomenclature difficulties. Absolutely!
Did he write this from a draft or outline of his father's? Group effort? It's the second published posthumously. This one seems Daniel Palmer to me.
Mercy Michael Palmer by Daniel Palmer Hmmm?
Not recommended to read this one with any breathing difficulties, or just before a surgery. Or to anyone that doesn't appreciate clear and exact medical and chemical exactness of description and jargon in practice of procedure.
Do you believe in making the end easier, quick as now, or chosen? Which, if any, is mercy? Or is it murder. It dissects that too.