Editorial Content for Spasm
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Reviewer (text)
It still feels like yesterday that I read COMA as a child in the late '70s. Robin Cook continues to produce stories that blend very real science within the framework of a medical thriller for readers to enjoy. His latest effort, SPASM, is set in the scenic upstate New York town of Essex Falls in Hamilton County, which is firmly amidst the majestic Adirondack Mountains range.
Essex Falls was once a thriving place until their major employer, the Rubington Paper Mill, closed down. Now, it is barely a shell of its once great self, but its current inhabitants remain staunch homebodies who refuse to leave. One of them is Dr. Robert Neilson, who maintains a state-of-the-art medical center where the offices of the paper company had been.
"SPASM is replete with all of the medical jargon and factual data that we have become accustomed to seeing in a Robin Cook novel.... This is a timely and frightening tale by the reigning king of the medical thriller."
Neilson has come across a type of epidemic unlike anything he has seen before. So he reaches out to his old chum from medical school, Jack Stapleton, who works in New York City for the OCME with his wife, Laurie Montgomery, the Chief Medical Examiner. It begins with two deaths that appear to be connected to an unpredictable rise in Alzheimer's cases in Essex Falls.
Readers get the inside track as to the true cause of the mysterious illnesses, and it is beyond anything the residents of this small town are prepared for. At the center of the dilemma is Ethan. This young man works as an exterminator during the day, while his side gig finds him leading a well-armed paramilitary troop composed of his fellow townsmen, who call themselves the Diehard Patriots.
In an effort to bring on some international expertise, Ethan works with a group of four Russian ex-military types who temporarily relocate to Essex Falls under the guise of being citizens from the Netherlands. In reality, they are experts in microbiology. Their goal is to work with rare and deadly prions, which, when added to the local water system, could incapacitate the entire area and every citizen. They use the ignorance and gullibility of Ethan and his team to allow them access to the huge Bennett estate, where they claim to be using the barn for the purpose of brewing beer.
Things get so bad that Dr. Neilson is able to get Jack and Laurie to take some time off from the OCME and enjoy a summer vacation in the mountains. Once they get there, they realize that something far more sinister is going on --- especially when Ethan becomes one of the victims of the disease only to have his body taken from the morgue. Jack, being a big basketball hound, gets involved in the weekly town game that also includes a member of the Russian crew. It is only through his natural sense of heightened suspicion and wonder that Jack begins to believe that this individual and his friends may not be who they appear to be.
SPASM is replete with all of the medical jargon and factual data that we have become accustomed to seeing in a Robin Cook novel. Cook spends a good deal of time ramping up the threat of the potential epidemic that is being brewed up, as well as the physical threat represented by the Russian team that will go to any extent to keep their mission a secret. This is a timely and frightening tale by the reigning king of the medical thriller.
Teaser
When Laurie Montgomery temporarily steps down from her position as Chief Medical Examiner at the OCME, she and Jack decide to embark on a weekend getaway. And the timing couldn't be better when they receive a call from Jack's old peer, Robert Neilson, MD, about two strange deaths and their potential association with the upswing in Alzheimer's cases in Essex Falls. Laurie and Jack agree to help. Robert tells them that the deaths are of two troublemakers, known to be white extremists, in their late 20s. Prior to their deaths, their behavior had been somewhat bizarre with both complaining of muscle spasms, nausea and off-the-charts anxiety. As Jack and Laurie get to work, they are led to believe that a dangerous bioweapon might be at play, which, in the wrong hands, could threaten the lives of the entire town...and maybe all of America.
Promo
When Laurie Montgomery temporarily steps down from her position as Chief Medical Examiner at the OCME, she and Jack decide to embark on a weekend getaway. And the timing couldn't be better when they receive a call from Jack's old peer, Robert Neilson, MD, about two strange deaths and their potential association with the upswing in Alzheimer's cases in Essex Falls. Laurie and Jack agree to help. Robert tells them that the deaths are of two troublemakers, known to be white extremists, in their late 20s. Prior to their deaths, their behavior had been somewhat bizarre with both complaining of muscle spasms, nausea and off-the-charts anxiety. As Jack and Laurie get to work, they are led to believe that a dangerous bioweapon might be at play, which, in the wrong hands, could threaten the lives of the entire town...and maybe all of America.
About the Book
From the "master of the medical thriller" (The New York Times), Robin Cook, fan favorites Jack and Laurie return in another fast-paced story about a deadly bioweapon that could disrupt the world order as they know it.
When Laurie Montgomery temporarily steps down from her position as Chief Medical Examiner at the OCME to get a break from office politics, she and Jack decide to embark on a weekend getaway. And the timing couldn't be better when they receive a call from Jack's old peer, Robert Neilson, MD, about two strange deaths and their potential association with the upswing in Alzheimer's cases in Essex Falls. Deciding this is just what the doctor ordered, Laurie and Jack agree to help, and head upstate.
But Essex Falls is far from the rural idyllic town of their imagination. It's apparent that most of the residents are earnest in their undying wish to return America back to the 1950s. Robert tells them that the deaths are of two troublemakers, known to be white extremists, in their late 20s. Prior to their deaths, their behavior had been somewhat bizarre with both complaining of muscle spasms, nausea and off-the-charts anxiety.
As Jack and Laurie get to work, they are led to believe that a dangerous bioweapon might be at play, which, in the wrong hands, could threaten the lives of the entire town...and maybe all of America.
Audiobook available, read by Will Damron


