4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
The high price of beauty., January 4, 2004
Dr. D. Welles D'Anton is a plastic surgeon for the rich and famous. He takes pride in removing physical imperfections from the women whom he transforms with his scalpel. However, as we see in Neil McMahon's medical thriller, "To the Bone," sometimes the pursuit of beauty is just not worth it.
Dr. Carroll Monks is an emergency room physician, employed in a San Francisco hospital, who is suffering from burnout. He has a failed marriage under his belt, children he rarely sees, and a borderline drinking problem. His girlfriend, Martine, seems ready to move on.
Monks is on duty when a beautiful young woman named Eden Hale is brought in to the ER in excruciating pain. The day before, Eden had been Dr. D'Anton's surgical patient. Now, the young woman is suffering from a rare blood clotting disorder with no obvious cause. Dr. Monks valiantly tries a controversial treatment to treat Eden, but he fails to save her. The fallout from this episode may cost Dr. Monks his job.
In an effort to prove that he was not responsible for Eden's death, Monks, along with his private investigator friend, Stover Larrabee, decide to look into Eden's background. They discover that the world of the rich, beautiful, and famous is, ironically, one of ugliness, insecurity, jealousy, and selfishness. Delving into the depressing world of the "beautiful people," Monk learns that there are individuals who look good physically, but who are even more emotionally burned out than he is.
The best moments in "To the Bone" are those that deal with the medical problems in the ER. The book falters when McMahon resorts to stereotypes in his exploration of the surgically enhanced women who rely on plastic surgery to stay young. There is another plot in "To the Bone" that deals with a serial killer. This plot is underdeveloped and the resolution comes out of left field.
"To the Bone" makes the valid point that the worship of physical beauty is a losing proposition. In addition, those who live for the moment, without any regard for the long-term consequences of their behavior, are foolish and self-destructive. Unfortunately, with the exception of Dr. Monks, who is a fully developed, three-dimensional character, "To the Bone" is as shallow as the beautiful women it depicts.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Engaging, fast-paced medical suspense story, November 2, 2003
Emergency room Doctor Carroll Monks is disturbed when a beautiful woman fails to respond to his treatment. Healthy young women shouldn't die--and when he notices strange bruisings, he orders powerful and non-standard treatment. The treatment fails and Monks is left wondering if he failed, or if someone else was responsible for Eden Hale's death. Because Eden was recovering from breast implant surgery, there is the possibility of complications and Dr. D'Anton, plastic surgeon to the beautiful people, is an obvious suspect. After all, how did a woman like Eden even afford D'Anton's price?
In this fast-paced story, author Neil McMahon introduces a string of suspects. The plastic surgeon, his sculpter-wife who once had an affair with Eden, the beautiful assistant, and the tough and secretive nurse all have possibilities. But as Monks and his friend, private detective Larrabee, investigate, they discover that D'Anton has been associated with other bizarre events and even a missing girl. Could Eden's death be only the tip of an obscene nightmare? McMahon occasionally steps into the point-of-view of a serial killer, indicating that Monks is onto something larger and more dangerous than he imagines.
Monks makes an interesting character with his woman troubles, his problems with excess drinking (not the man I'd want working on me in an emergency room), and his obsession for discovering the truth. Playing to society's strangely ambiguous feelings about doctors who create beauty, McMahon maintains the suspense and keeps the pages turning.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Fast, October 13, 2003
See storyline above.
Though somewhat short and a little light on character depth (it's been many books ago since I've read his last one so I don't remember the characters), this McMahon medical thriller was satisfying. This one is comparable to McMahons previous novels.
Recommended
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