A Case of Need
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A Case of Need

A Case of Need
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A Case of Need

by Michael Crichton (Contributor: Jeffrey Hudson)
Product Group: Book
Publisher: Signet (1994-07-01)
ISBN: 0451183665
EAN: 9780451183668
Dewy Decimal #: 813.54
Mass Market Paperback: 416 pages
SKU: mon0000046935
Condition: Good
Comments: Average used book, may have price sticker on front cover, shelfwear. BUY WITH CONFIDENCE: 99% Positive feedback. 100% Satisfaction Guaranteed!!!!! Compare our prices and service to the competition!


Editorial Reviews


Product Description
From the bestselling author of Jurassic Park and Rising Sun, this national bestseller combines breathtaking suspense with a penetrating examination of America's medical establishment. When a woman bleeds to death on the operating table, her physician is accused of murder--and another physician searches for the horrible truth. HC: Dutton.


Customer Reviews


A Stimulating Story that kept my interest
Rating (4)
Date: 2008-05-25

1 out of 1 customers found this reveiw helpful


A Case of Need is a stimulating story that kept my interest and I found that it was hard to put down. It educated s on some of the arguments for both sides of the abortion issue while maintaining a very good story line and character set. The plot revolves around who performed an illegal abortion on a girl from an affluent family.
As you read on you that the abortion killed the girl, so the person who performed the abortion is guilty of murder. For medical thriller fans I would highly recommend this book.


In Case of Need
Rating (2)
Date: 2008-03-27


Did not care for the story. It was too similar to another book on the same lines as this one. Gave the book away.


A Case of Need
Rating (4)
Date: 2008-02-15


I've been a big fan of Michael Crichton ever since I read The Andromeda Strain. Not only is his writing style suspenseful and interesting, but his attention to detail regarding the subject matter can be a learning experience. A Case of Need will certainly give you pause regarding the medical field and the lengths that some doctors would probably go to in order to cover their backsides. Once you are into a Crichton novel it's almost impossible to put down until you are finished.


Misery begets misery
Rating (5)
Date: 2007-11-20


I rarely read true stories, but after this one, Crichton has redeemed himself. It's interesting, informative and breathtaking. I love it!!!
(^u^)


An unintentional but revealing "portrait of the author as a young man"
Rating (5)
Date: 2007-11-06


Dr. John Berry is a pathologist who's been covering for a colleague's policy of occasionally providing abortions. The colleague, Dr. Arthur Lee, truly believes that failure to provide medical care - in the form of a safe hospital procedure - constitutes malpractice, morally speaking. He bases this belief on the number of women who, when refused such a procedure, end their pregnancies anyway by methods far more dangerous.

Now Art Lee is in jail, charged with an abortion that John Berry believes he didn't perform. The patient, daughter of a prominent Boston surgeon, died. According to her family, Karen Randall was a saintly young woman who's been foully murdered. According to Karen's friends and other associates, though, she was anything else but saintly. The same thing goes for her outraged father, and for most of the other people Dr. Berry winds up investigating as he desperately searches for the truth about Karen's death. Who actually did perform the abortion that killed her? That's the only information sure to free Dr. Lee before his case comes to trial, and a trial all by itself - even if it ends in acquittal - will kill his career, in this medical and social world of the late 1960s.

Michael Crichton's first novel, originally published under a pseudonym, is an amazing piece of work for so young a writer (he was 26). It's an intriguing detective story entwined with a stinging commentary on social hypocrisy and medical ethics, that 40 years later had the power to put me back in the world of my own adolescence. A world where unwed motherhood automatically branded the woman as at worst immoral, at best grossly immature; and where the laws of most U.S. states made termination of pregnancy in a hospital all but impossible, except when physicians like the fictional Art Lee and John Berry falsified the patient's diagnosis to provide a D&C for apparent "medical necessity."

Brrr. That world's memory scares me all by itself. The surprising thing about this book, though, isn't its "message" (it ought to be required reading for any woman who's grown up knowing she had control of her reproductive capacity from menarche onward). It's the look backward into the time and place that shaped this successful author, and then realizing - if you've read as many of his books as I have - how hard it was for him to let this world go, in creating the characters and plots for his later works.


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