This novel was a medical thriller classic. It was
interesting & engaging…..two qualities that make a medical thriller work.
The gripping ending was well written & the characters captivate the reader.
The idea of SSD (Sudden Surgical Death) is well laid out in this book along
with many other soul searching questions associated with the medical field.
However, the main question put forward in this book is one which is still asked
till this day………..who can judge who really requires expensive medical aid of a
hospital……..everyone ? even when there are shortage of beds ? even those who we
know won’t survive for long ?......who is going to bell the cat…..who is going
to play God ?
The story is well presented with a lot of heated dialogues
about what is morally right & what isn't when one is concerned about
treatment. The easy way a person can kill another in a hospital is also very
well described in this book. To give internists a chance to work on patients,
the risks involved & all the information about a surgery that is kept a
secret from unquestioning patients is well illustrated in this novel. The
delicacy of cardiac surgery is also one of great importance that is presented
in this novel & how many people each day die of heart related symptoms.
Another idea that presents itself in this book is about the
egoism & narcissistic tendencies of excellent surgeons. The pressure on
good surgeons is tackled very well by Robin Cook including the way such
surgeons often take recourse to drugs to overcome the sort of ‘emptiness’ they
feel within after too much of adulation. However, as the book describes, such
surgeons often are unable to be in control of their thoughts & emotions
& therefore, have a terrible end.
Two characters that stand out in this novel are the famous
cardiac surgeon Thomas Kingsley & his wife Cassandra (Cassi) Cassidy who is
a first year psychiatrist who was earlier into pathology. Both are very
different characters. Though Cassi is the protagonist in the story, more
emphasis is given to her spouse Thomas who is a very volatile character always
on tenterhooks & ready to burst at all times. Their failing marriage along
with Thomas’ drug abuse is the focal point of this novel. Both characters have
tendencies to be dependent on an external factor to feel ‘fine’. While Cassi
finds her solace in her husband, Thomas’ finds his in drugs & extra-marital
affairs. The author ultimately relates how intelligence does not necessarily
mean one can be successful in life……only when one is happy with ones state of
life & takes each day as it comes, only them is one in total control of
ones faculties.
The bureaucratic interference in surgery as well as the
drastic decisions they take to make a mark in the market is also put forward
very well & delicately in the novel. How business has changed the face of
medicine especially surgery is narrated in most of the chapters in a very
interesting way as well as the loopholes that such groups want to keep a secret
or shield from the public eye. In the novel it is shown that truth always does
not garner importance if it interferes in the working of the bureaucracy. The
story shows the reader clearly how the fine line separating medicine &
business is slowly disappearing.
Thrilling & a challenge to read, Godplayer is a real
looking glass into the workings of the human mind &………….how at times it is
simply too easy to kill.
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