Title: The CareTAKERS
Author: William T. Delamar
ISBN: 978-1-62420-183-7
Email: delamarw@juno.com
Genre: Contemporary Medical Fiction
Excerpt Heat Level: 1
Book Heat Level: 1
TAGLINE
The CareTAKERS is a contemporary novel based on
a hospital administrator’s ethical, financial and political issues in an urban
environment.
BLURB
Doug
Carpenter, a new administrator, the third in four years, at Eastern Medical
College Hospital, fights hospital power politics and physician greed while
trying to provide a good setting for patient care. This combative scene forms a
constant barrier to a successful, smooth-running operation and creates a threat
to Doug's own position, but that's not all. A patient commits suicide. A drunk
anesthesiologist kills a mother during an emergency delivery. Several patients
are victims of an “angel of death.” A patient is poisoned by an unscrupulous
doctor. A union strike explodes. A female goon brutalizes two nurses. On top of
all that, Doug's wife is injured in a terroristic attack instigated by the
pro-union forces. This all happens in only a matter of weeks, challenging
Doug’s every emotion, diplomatic expertise, morals and ethics.
REVIEWS:
The CareTAKERS
William T. Delamar
978-1-62420-183-7
Reviewed by Joseph Allen
5 Stars out of 5
An engaging, exciting story of intrigue in a fast-failing hospital
William T Delamar’s fast-paced and moving hospital novel, The
CareTAKERS, is like the television world of sexy lovable Dr McDreamy and
grouchy brilliant Gregory House – turned on its head. At Eastern Hospital,
affiliated with Eastern Medical College, most of the physicians are greedy,
uncaring, careless, bigoted, and many are incompetent. The head of
anesthesiology manages to kill patients during alcoholic hazes in the operating
room. Their characters border on satire, but there are no smiles intended. No matinee
idols, not even close.
Fortunately the less visible folks at Eastern are the salvation of
both the hospital and the down-and-out community that surrounds it. Doug
Carpenter is the Hospital Administrator, very much a dog to be kicked at times,
but also a moral person not to be crossed when push comes to shove. Throw in a
sexy union organizer-stripper and several choric elderly ladies, and you
suspect from the get-go that Eastern Hospital is either going to get saved or
torn apart. No way to tell, for the most part.
Only a few weeks pass during the narrative – a landmark time for
the hospital because of a pending State review and a plan to build a new
hospital building even as the patient count declines. The unon organizer’s
antics offer some eye-popping relief for a time, but then she opens the doors
to the squalor and suffering of the community, which has a major effect on the
outcome.
The plot is presented in a racial divide that will make some
readers uncomfortable, and that may seem exaggerated to some readers – but it
serves to let us know the Capulets from the Montagues, so to speak.
The book is a winner, which is not to say it does not have its
flaws. The cast of characters is so large it seems like a Russian novel that
might have benefitted from a bit of slimming down – only to avoid confusion.
There are a couple of beastly stereotyped nurses’ aides who don’t add much. But
the protagonists and antagonists are sharply drawn and very close to life. A
bit slow at the vey beginning, it becomes a page-turner quickly.
The CareTAKERS
William T. Delamar
978-1-62420-183-7
By Joyce Zeller
4 Stars out of 5
Author Delamar's book is a
fascinating account of hospital power politics and greedy ambition. Hospital
administrator Doug Carpenter is struggling to bring Eastern Medical College out
of a financial mess and into the 21st century and deal with cost overruns on a
new building project. There's no doubt the author has an "up close and
personal" understanding of the turf wars that go on when massive egos are
involved but, when a hospital, with which most of us will know intimately
sometime in our lives is the subject, it takes on a personal urgency. The book
begins with Doug's early arrival at the office where he is greeted by the bomb
squad. It seems a doctor has been storing a highly explosive chemical in dozens
of glass jars in a fourth floor hallway. Events proceed non-stop with a
"lost" patient in a wheelchair who has been left in a backroom
overnight, rumors of patients dying prematurely, a union organizer creating
uproar among the nurses, doctors fighting over fees, a teenage suicide, and on
and on. Although I found the book entertaining, I couldn't give it five stars
because there was little backstory on the characters. I wanted to know more
about them so I could care about them. I felt the writer was more interested in
the devious political maneuvers of the characters than he was about their
humanity.
There should have been more tension or more danger so I could become more emotionally involved.
EXCERPT
Doug
pulled past the emergency room and swerved to miss a large police van with BOMB SQUAD written on the side. What the hell! It stuck half way out in
the lane. He zipped into the parking garage and nosed into his space.
"Mr.
Carpenter!" Bill Hanes, the safety officer, came running and huffing up
the ramp, his fat face and bald head pointing like a warhead. "I had you
paged. We've got a problem in the labs."
"Got
anything to do with that bomb squad truck parked by Emergency?"
"Yes
sir. The bomb squad is here." He took short side steps, dancing back
toward the hospital as though to pull Doug with him.
"What
the hell for?" Doug moved with him and Bill walked faster.
"Well,
I…" his voice trailed away, "called them."
Doug
ran to keep up with the big man.
"Why?"
With everything else, what now? Was there a bomb threat?"
"No,
sir. Maybe. Yes, sir. Dr. Snowden has stuff on the fourth floor that could blow
up any minute and take the hospital with it. I mean the whole hospital."
He
gestured with his arms, making a large circle, and Doug nearly ran into him.
"What
stuff?" He followed him across the short stretch of lawn.
"Picric
acid, and it's been there a long time, and you know what happens to that stuff
when it gets old."
"No,
I don't know. What happens?"
"It
crystallizes, and that's when it's ready to explode. Anything will set it off
and he's got big jars of it sitting in the hallway."
Bill
gestured and jabbered, and Doug felt like an idiot chasing after him. He
followed him through the side door of the main building, into the clinging
hospital smells. He clanged up the metal stripped steps after him, not waiting
for the elevator.
"How
did you discover it? And why didn't you work it out with Snowden? Why call the
bomb squad?" He strained to catch his breath. "And what does Snowden
use it for if it's an explosive?"
"I
don't know what he uses it for, but I picked up one of the bottles to tell him
he couldn't store stuff on the hall floor when I saw the name on the label. I
started to unscrew the cap, but then I saw the crystals. And you know what that
stuff can do."
The
big round man strained up the steps ahead of him like Humpty Dumpty. A wild
goose chase to start the day? Was this guy's brain a wad of waste? But
sometimes he was right. Snowden had been a pathologist forever. Certainly, he
would know. He'd been chairperson of the labs for over twenty years without
blowing up anything. Three more flights of clattering stairs. Gasping for
breath, they burst out of the stairwell into the hallway to find Cliff Toliver,
the Chief of Security, all five foot four of him, talking to Dr. Snowden. A
police sergeant and two other officers, covered with body padding, stood
listening.
Doug
and Hanes stopped for a moment, perspiring and panting. Ben Snowden bent down,
scooped a half-gallon glass container from the floor, tossed it in the air,
then caught it with one hand.
One
of the officers threw himself flat on the floor. The other officer and the
sergeant backed against the wall.
"Idiots."
Snowden tossed the container to the surprised sergeant who managed to clutch it
to his chest. He stood, mouth open.
"I
was using this stuff when you were in diapers."
The
sergeant straightened up, his eyes like stones. He turned, handing the
container to the officer standing next to him. The officer squatted and placed
the container in a padded steel box. The other officer got up from the floor
and stared at Snowden.
The
sergeant turned to Snowden. "No disrespect intended, sir. You may be a
doctor, sir, but you're a damn fool, sir." He looked at Bill. "Any
more of this stuff? We've got seven containers."
"No
sir. I've checked everywhere. That's all there is."
"You're
sure? If there's more hidden away, I'll have the building evacuated."
"Sergeant,
I'm Doug Carpenter, the administrator. Can you tell me what's going on?" Little martinet. He's not about to close
down this hospital.
"There's
not much to tell. We received a phone call from Mr. Hanes at 6:35. We proceeded
here, arriving at 6:40, and found twenty-six half-gallon containers of what
used to be picric acid and is now a highly explosive salt called lyddite. If
all of this blew," he waved his hand at the steel boxes, "none of us
would live to tell about it." He glared his contempt at Snowden.
The
other two officers snapped a series of latches shut on the steel box.
"Doug,
all these idiots have to do is add water to restore it. This is stupid."
Snowden laughed, but he didn't look happy.
Doug
turned to the sergeant. "What are you going to do with it?"
"We're
going to take it out into the north rock quarry and detonate it."
Ben
Snowden planted his fists on his hips, his mouth twisted to one side, white
eyebrows raised in disbelief.
The
sergeant kept his eyes off Snowden as though he didn't exist. "The point
is, in its crystallized form it's explosive. If you'd like to come along and
see what could have happened in this building, you'd be welcome."
Doug
nodded. "No, thanks, but Bill, I think you should.”
"I'm
going, too," snapped Dr. Snowden. "I want to see these toy soldiers
blow up this harmless material. It might be enough to pop corn."
"Okay."
Doug turned to Bill. "I'd like a complete report as soon as you return.
Maybe you ought to go, too, Cliff."
Toliver
was already moving to a hall phone to have a car brought around.
"Ben,
give me a call later." The old man just distorted his face in disgust.
Doug felt like apologizing for being in a hurry. He waited for the elevator to
drone to the fourth floor. He had told Dr. Whyte he would meet him at seven.
Doug looked at his watch – ten after. Whyte was not a man to be kept waiting.
What the hell? Who was?
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