"Bloodstream" Reviews
BOOKLIST: July 19, 1998
Dr. Claire Elliot, newly come to Tranquility, Maine, and its hospital, stumbles
into an epidemic of teen violence. Her son becomes involved, along with other
young and, eventually, older citizens of the suspicious town. With the aid of
police chief Lincoln Kelly, Elliot searches for a cause. Blue mushrooms in a teen-favored
corner of the woods turn out to be a red herring. The green phosphorescence that
occasionally appears on Lake Locust, in which many teens regularly swim, is, however,
another matter. Despite misgivings, the high-school principal, who has long yearned
for Chief Kelly, gives the go-ahead for the big dance. At it, violence threatens,
of course, and Kelly almost talks a teenager into giving up a revolver. Just at
the wrong moment, the number-two town cop and his crew burst onto the dance floor.
Then Elliot and Kelly discover that earlier outbreaks of violence took place,
like these, after a flood and a hot, dry summer. A drug company worker masquerading
as a reporter, a sharp pathologist, and a cave of worms help bring Gerritsen's
third fascinating, well-crafted, fast-paced medical thriller (the others were
the best-selling Harvest [1996] and Life Support ) to a credible, creditable ending.
-- William Beatty
KIRKUS Reviews: June 15, 1998
Third straight biological unpleasantry by redeployed internist Gerritsen (Support,
1997, etc.), who shuns no commercial device on the quest to suck in ever more
readers. While fairly deft at characterization, Gerritsen shows even more smarts
in chronicling high-energy ER work (she writes about more bodies than doctors)
and ingeniously invents a new brain-altering parasite that has spread through
the small resort town of Tranquility, Maine. Dr. Claire Elliot has moved with
her adolescent son Noah to Tranquility’s Locust Lake after he failed to
come to grips with his fathers death in Baltimore. As the replacement for the
late Dr. Pomeroy, she has her problems being accepted by the locals. But these
are nothing beside the plague of violence erupting among the town's young folk.
Their mysterious rages bring on many deaths, including the shooting of Noah's
biology teacher during class and such bloody events as all-nails-bared catfights
among predatory girl students. Slowly, Dr. Elliot comes to believe in her theory
of a parasite invading Locust Lake, where the kids swim. Of course, the townies,
who have read their Ibsen (or Peter Benchleys Jaws), won't hear of this; the
bad news would demean Tranquility’s resort attractiveness and blame the
messenger for her insights. Well, is the villain really a pork tapeworm whose
eggs were blithely flushed into the lake? Did yet other eggs cause Tranquilitys
none-too-tranquil murder rampages 50 and 100 years ago? Does the globby green
bioluminescence that appears on Locust Lake and even smears the violent kids
point up the source of the mystery parasite? And what's this green glowing earthworm
in Noah's sinus that's nearly killing him? Weirdly terrific stuff with a steel
grip. Doc Gerritsen's mastery of the stupefying stupidity inherent in adolescent
resistance to almost everything may well give the reader gray hairs. (Literary
Guild selection; Mystery Guild main selection; author tour)
-- Copyright ©1998, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.
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