I have become an absolute fan of Ken McClure. This was his third novel that I read, and likely many more will follow.
Mystery, suspense and thrillers have come to be redefined over the years, and most novels of these genres tend to overdo every aspect of the story telling. So, unless there is 'edge of the seat' action, 'nail biting' thrills and overly complicated suspens, it won't do. This is where this novel (indeed, the author's story telling craft) is such a refreshing change. I had used the term 'refreshing' while reviewing one of his other novel as well, and I cannot say it enough.
The plot revolves around the seemingly natural deaths of two young children during routine kidney transplant operations. Only, both these deaths occurring over a space of more than 3 years at the same hospital had two nurses crying foul. Both these nurses, independently and unknown to each other, had alleged that the children had been transplanted with the wrong organs, and hence the deaths, despite the routine nature of these transplant operations. This leads to a specialised wing of the Government, Sci-Med to depute one of its undercover investigator, Steven Dunbar, to the hospital. Steven Dunbar, somewhat Sherlock Holme-ish in nature, goes about digging the truth. Once revealed, the truth comes out a scary.
The pace of the novel is very even, and always maintains a pleasurable tempo, and accelerates towards the last 30-40 pages when it is opportune to do so. The narrative is once again very nice, smooth, proper and polite. Character development is fantastic. The story is very believable; in-fact, even true in countries like India where we come across snippets of organ trade every now and then.
This is a genuine medical thriller, with hardly any overdose of jargons, so it ensures even the lay-reader comprehends the story. This is how a suspense/mystery ought to be!