Reader's Digest Condensed Books, 1994 #214: Fatal Cure / The Wrong House / Red Ink / Having Our Say

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Reader's Digest Condensed Books, 1994 #214: Fatal Cure / The Wrong House / Red Ink / Having Our Say

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"Fatal Cure" by Robin CookA small haspital in a quiet New England town - just the place you'd expect to find good old-fashioned medical care,...

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"Fatal Cure" by Robin Cook
A small haspital in a quiet New England town - just the place you'd expect to find good old-fashioned medical care, down-home values, and the up-to-date version of a country doctor.
It's the last place you'd expect to find what young physicians David and Angela Wilson did. They'd come for the simple lifestyle, to give their daughter, Nikki, a fighting chance against life-threatening cystic fibrosis. and to be good doctors.
But for some unexplained reason patients at Bartlet Community Hospital are dying at an alarming rate. And not from the illnesses they've been admitted for.

"The Wrong House" by Carol McD. Wallace
Frances Drummond has retirement all figured out. She and her husband will by a quaint little cottage in Connecticut. She'll tend the garden. He'll restore the parquet floors. And they'll be close enough to New York so their grown children will be har-pressed for excuses not to visit.
A rosy vision that unfortunately is not to be. For a monumental mishap, a case of unforgivable bumbling, is about to play a mean trick on Frances. And while the rest of the world might laugh it off, Frances, most assuredly, is not amused.

"Red Ink" by Greg Dinallo
Skilduggery was so easy in the old Soviet Union. There were the corrupt party officials, the dissidents, the black marketeers. Working the angles, a streetwise newspaperman like Nikolai Katkov could get by nicely.
But now it's all changed, Ex-KGB assassins are looking over their shoulders. A ruthless new criminal class is on the rise. Freedom and the profit motive have turned modern-day Moscow into a deadly free-for-all.
It's a dangerous time for anyone - even the best reporter - to go digging up a story.

"Having Our Say: The Delany Sisters' First 100 Years" with Amy Hill Hearth
Reaching the venerable age of a hundred plus is rare. But centenarian sisters Sadie and Bessie Delany are two rare individuals. Born into the poverty of the post Civil War South, the Delany girls not only beat the odds, they made history.
Their story is inspiring. But be advised - when the Delany sisters speak out, the feather fly. Seems that advanced years bring special privileges - amoung them, the right to have your say.
"Bessie and Sadie Delany five themselves so completely to the reader it's as if you're in the home of these intelligent, humorous women listening to the mtalk over dinner." - Los Angeles Times Book Review




  • Format:Hardcover
  • Pages:574 pages
  • Publication:1994
  • Publisher:Reader's Digest Association, Inc.
  • Edition:First Edition
  • Language:eng
  • ISBN10:
  • ISBN13:
  • kindle Asin:



About Author

Robin Cook

Robin Cook

3.80 359158 15994
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