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First, Do No Harm [Hardcover]

Larry Karp (Author)
4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)

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Book Description

October 1, 2004
The past comes rearing up to bite the
next generation when a son digs too deep into his family's past....
Martin Firestone can't figure why his father, the eccentric painter Leo Firestone, is throwing a fit. All Martin did was tell his dad he'd been accepted to medical school.
Then, Leo tells Martin a story about his own father, Dr. Samuel Firestone, an extraordinarily gifted doctor and a living legend in the small city of Hobart, NJ, but a man with a serious character flaw. During the summer of 1943, while Leo worked as Samuel's extern, he witnessed some highly questionable behavior. Illegal abortions, supplying heroin to an addict, black-market pharmaceuticals, babies sold to adoptive parents-all in a day's work for Samuel Firestone, M.D.
When Leo decided his father was covering up a murder, he and his girlfriend, stage-struck Harmony, followed a trail of clues into the Fleischmann Scrapyard. There, they ran afoul of old Oscar Fleischmann, Samuel's longtime nemesis. By the time Leo realized he and Harmony were in far over their sixteen-year-old heads, it was too late to call off the investigation.
But there are loose threads in Leo's story. Martin picks them up, and sixty years after the fact, goes snooping in Hobart. And like his father, he comes away with a whole lot more junk than he'd bargained for.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Taking a break from his Thomas Purdue mysteries (The Midnight Special, etc.), Karp moves from antiques to medicine in this sharp, well-written crime novel. Martin Firestone, a computer technician, has decided to change his life by attending medical school. When he tells his father, renowned artist Leo Firestone, the elder Firestone reacts with tremendous anger. Shocked at his father's reaction, Martin nevertheless stands his ground. Leo then asks his son to meet him for lunch and proceeds to tell him about his paternal grandfather. Dr. Samuel Firestone, Leo's father, was a legend in Hobart, N.J., a doctor whom everyone—rich or poor—could count on in an emergency. He had a sixth sense about medicine and made house calls at any time of the day or night. Samuel Firestone also knew the darkest secrets of everyone in his community, and when he took his young son (Leo) on as an assistant, he inadvertently set a tragic series of events in motion. Karp's story, steeped in descriptions of 1940s smalltown life, builds to a shattering climax that will haunt readers as much as the book's characters. Fans of Robin Cook or Patricia Cornwell will find this mystery strikingly different, for it deals not in medical science but in the frailty of human love and devotion.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

*Starred Review* A well-told story is nearly irresistible, and Karp has two phenomenal stories to recount here. The first concerns Martin Firestone, whose father, famous New York artist Leo Firestone, angrily demands a lunch meeting after finding out that Martin has been accepted to medical school. Karp's second story is narrated by Leo over lunch, as he recounts shadowing his doctor father, Samuel, in Hobart, New Jersey, during the summer of 1943. Much as teenage Leo admires his dad, he is bothered by some of his behavior--such as performing abortions, buying black-market drugs, and looking the other way after a murder. With help from his musician girlfriend, Harmony, Leo begins to investigate his father's actions-- and isn't pleased with what he finds out. Playing a key role in the story is Fleischmann Scrapyard, where Leo attempts to discover why his father and Oscar, the cruel scrap-yard owner, are such bitter enemies. After Leo finishes his story, Martin is not satisfied and goes back to Hobart to find out what Leo is not telling him. A triumph of storytelling--the juggling of the two narratives is flawless--that will hold readers as spellbound as a terrifying tale told round the campfire. Jenny McLarin
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 264 pages
  • Publisher: Poisoned Pen Press (October 1, 2004)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 159058130X
  • ISBN-13: 978-1590581308
  • Product Dimensions: 8.8 x 5.8 x 0.9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (7 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #3,631,429 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Larry Karp grew up in Paterson, New Jersey and New York City. He worked as a specialist in complicated pregnancy care for 25 years, founding the Prenatal Diagnosis Center at the University of Washington, and Swedish Medical Center's Department of Perinatal Medicine. Residents in the Family Practice Programs at both Swedish and Providence Hospitals named him Teacher of the Year.

During his medical years, Larry wrote newspaper and magazine articles on a wide range of subjects, as well as a monthly column of commentary for the American Journal of Medical Genetics. He also wrote three nonfiction books. The View from The Vue described life as a med student and intern at New York's Bellevue Hospital; The Enchanted Ear was a collection of anecdotes about collecting and restoring antique music boxes. Genetic Engineering: Threat or Promise discussed the newly-emerging fields of genetic manipulation in humans. (Of this work, the author of a major genetics textbook wrote, "Of the many recent books on genetic engineering the only one that...carefully delineates the limits of current knowledge and tries to evaluate the significance of recent advances without resorting to sensationalism is by Karp").

Larry collects and restores antique music boxes, and is a regular contributor to Mechanical Music, the magazine of the Music Box Society International. In 1997, the Society presented him the Bowers Literary Award "for outstanding literary contributions to the field of automatic music."

In 1995, Larry left medical work to write full-time. He chose to write mysteries because the genre demands stories to be well-paced and tightly-constructed, but does not preclude the possibility of presenting characters and ideas which refuse to leave the reader's mind once he or she closes the back cover of the book. Larry set his well-received Music Box Mystery Series (The Music Box Murders, Scamming the Birdman and The Midnight Special) in present-day New York City. For his next book, First, Do No Harm, a World-War II home-front standalone involving complex and troubling medical ethical issues, he moved back to 1943 to a fictionalized Paterson.

Then, Larry ranged further back and farther away to write a historical-mystery trilogy, three books which blended fiction into history to look at signal events, social attitudes and racial relations at the birth, death, and revival of ragtime music in America. The first book, The Ragtime Kid, was set in Sedalia, Missouri in 1899, when white music-store owner John Stark made the extraordinary and unexplained offer of a royalties contract for a tune, "Maple Leaf Rag", by a young, little-known black composer named Scott Joplin. The second book in the trilogy, The King of Ragtime, was set in New York City in 1916, and centered on a real-life dispute between Joplin and Irving Berlin over an accusation of musical plagiarism and theft. The third book, The Ragtime Fool, completes the trilogy, as Brun Campbell, the old Ragtime Kid, comes back to Sedalia in 1951 to take care of some unfinished business.

What's the latest? During his first career, Larry served as Medical Director of Swedish Medical Center's Reproductive Genetics Facility and delivered the first baby in the Pacific Northwest conceived through in vitro fertilization. He drew on that experience to write A PERILOUS CONCEPTION, the story of an overly-ambitious young obstetrician in the Pacific Northwest, secretly trying to make medical history by producing the world's first IVF baby. Unfortunately, that sort of secret is hard to keep, and the upshot is blackmail and murder.

Larry's books have been finalists for the Daphne and Spotted Owl Awards, and have appeared on the Los Angeles Times (The Ragtime Kid, December 2006) and Seattle Times (The King of Ragtime, November 2008) Fiction Best-Seller Lists.


 

Customer Reviews

7 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.1 out of 5 stars (7 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Compelling!, July 26, 2005
By 
This review is from: First, Do No Harm (Paperback)
Martin Firestone is in his mid-twenties when he decides to make a career shift. He is accepted to medical school and tells his father, artist Leo Firestone. But Leo explodes with anger at Martin's announcement, demands he meet him for lunch where much of the novel takes place.

At lunch Leo Firestone tells when he acted as an extern for his physician father, Dr. Samuel Firestone during the summer of 1943. It was the summer he lost his boyhood, and his life changed forever.

Dr. Samuel Firestone practiced in Hobart, New Jersey and was considered a doctor whom everyone could count on no matter the emergency or time of day. An excellent diagnostician, Dr. Firestone knew the community's needs and secrets.

While working for his father, Leo learns about black-market adoptions, abortion, murder, his mother's drug addiction as well as breaking the law while the country is at war. With his childhood friend, Harmony, Leo investigates the activities of the scrapyard owned by evil Oscar, helpful Martin -- and the parts of his father's life that trouble him.

It is what happens after Leo finished his story that brings resolution to a lifetime of regret and sadness.

Karp's prose brings Hobart and the era alive. I will definitely read Karp's other works. Armchair Interviews says the story is compelling and the plot intriguing. The twists and turns will draw you in to capture and keep your attention






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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Doctor's Choices, Larry Karp's "First, Do No Harm", October 21, 2004
By 
Ruth Greiner "mystery reader" (Camp Hill, PA United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: First, Do No Harm (Hardcover)
"First, Do No Harm," by Larry Karp, begins with a choice: Martin Firestone, son of powerful and eccentric artist Leo Firestone, announces his decision to leave his career in computers and enter medical school. To Martin's shock and amazement, his father is furious, and insists that Martin lunch with him the next day. He has a story to tell him, he says. And so he does.
Martin's grandfather, Leo tells him, was Dr. Samuel Firestone, a legendary diagnostician and healer in their small New Jersey city. Leo's story begins the summer he turns sixteen, when his father offers him the opportunity to work as his extern. Their work takes them throughout the city, and Leo witnesses his father's remarkable abilities. Leo also becomes aware of many mysterious connections between the gifted physician--the Sorcerer--and the owner of a family-owned scrap metal business--the Junkman. As the summer progresses, the connections multiply: a heart attack that doesn't look like a heart attack, a blackmail threat, too many "nieces" having their babies. Leo begins to suspect that his father is involved in covering up a murder, and more. He decides to investigate, along with his best friend, and as the investigation plays out, disaster ensues.
"First, Do No Harm" is a father's story, told to his son, as well as a son's story, told about his father. But within these two stories are individual histories, of an era, of a city, and of another father and his son. And the final story spans three generations and two families--the Sorcerer's and the Junkman's--and the choices they made along the way. Most of these choices were made for the best of reasons. And what followed from them was often good: lives were saved, babies found loving adoptive parents, young women were enabled to live productive lives. But these same choices spawned great harm, as well: abortions, addiction, black marketing of metal and of drugs, and finally, violent death. Martin's grandfather, a larger than life character, practiced medicine on an heroic scale--but with heroism, came hubris, that pride that drove him to push the Hippocratic oath beyond its limits, redefining civil and human laws on his own terms.
The writing here is first-rate. The dual narratives proceed clearly, and the cadence is assured. A physician himself, Karp conveys the depth and scope of Samuel's skills with authority. The sense of place--and time--is vivid; it wouldn't be a Larry Karp book without music, and the background music of the narrative is played on a variety of radios, all playing the music of 1943, in the cars and homes and offices the reader sees. There a music box, too, that connects Leo himself to the Junkman just as Leo's father was linked to his nemesis, the Junkman's father. It also connects Leo to a girl named Harmony, his first love and "soul mate;" surely her name is no coincidence.
The characters are equally vivid--they speak in their own voices, and they tell their own stories, from Leo the artist to Murray the junkman to the characters within each narrative. And all these narratives dovetail with one another, like the music that permeates the book. As the several narratives unfold, the truths become more painful and more violent, until, in the end, a weary Martin concludes that "With the best intentions, the Sorcerer and the Junkman paved twin highways to hell."
Two of Leo's paintings frame the conclusion of the novel. One stays with Leo, and the other, an unfinished work, passes on to Martin, to complete with his own life. What he has learned has been devastating, but out of that devastation has come resolution, and a possibility of a greater final good.
"First, Do No Harm" is Larry Karp's fourth, and finest, novel. The first three, featuring amateur sleuth Dr. Thomas Purdue, are set in New York City, in the world of antique music boxes, and are engaging, intelligent, and intricately plotted. They share the same vivid sense of place that's found in "First, Do No Harm." Karp lives in Seattle, where he is working on his next novel.
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5.0 out of 5 stars A Wonderful Read, January 31, 2006
This review is from: First, Do No Harm (Paperback)
Martin Firestone can't figure out why his father, the eccentric painter Leo Firestone, is throwing a fit. All Martin did was tell his dad he'd been accepted to medical school. Then, Leo tells Martin a story about his own father, Dr. Samuel Firestone, an extraordinarily gifted doctor and living legend in the small city of Hobart, NJ, but a man with a serious character flaw. During the summer of 1943, while Leo worked as Samuel's extern, he witnessed some highly questionable behavior. When Leo decided his father was covering up a murder, he and his girlfriend, followed a trail of clues to find the truth. By the time they realized they were in far over their sixteen-year-old heads, it was too late to call off the investigation. But there are loose threads in Leo's story. Martin picks them up, and sixty years after the fact, goes snooping in Hobart. And like his father, he comes away with a whole lot more junk than he'd bargained for.

This is a terrific book that I just couldn't put down. The writing is powerful, the characters dynamic and the story fascinating. The author pulls you into the story with the first paragraph and gradually peels away the layers on a sixty year old mystery. The more you read the more you want to know. This book is not only about the destination (the solution of the mystery) it's also all about the journey to get there. It's a grand journey with a compelling ending and a fascinating look into the world of the past when doctors were perceived as gods who in the end were just as human as everyone else.
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