The Poison Plum is a gripping, chilling novel exposing the rampaging epidemic of Lyme Disease now sweeping across America and the disease's connection, if any, to the government's top-secret biological research laboratory at Plum Island, New York.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
6 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
True To Life,
This review is from: The Poison Plum (Hardcover)
The Poison Plum is presented as fiction but yet the underlying basic message of the book is very true to life. This is a book that everyone needs to read. You don't have to be a Lyme disease patient to appreciate this gripping tale of political intrigue. It is most definitely a page turner and it was very difficult to put down.The book begins in Alabama, back in the 1940s, where the famous Tuskegee Syphilis Experiment took place. This subject later ties into the plot. Next we visit New London, Connecticut where a retired respected colonel with lyme disease, takes revenge on a boatload of microbiologists returning home for the day from Plum Island. Plum Island is an animal disease research facility off the tip of Long Island, New York. One of Plum Island's employees, Susan Collins, was not on the boat that particular day because she was taking her son, Toby, to the doctor. Toby had contracted a mysterious illness and she was hoping her son would finally be diagnosed with something tangible so he could be treated. Homeland Security and Plum Island officials discovered that the Colonel had been dying of Lyme disease and they realized that he had traced the origins of this disease to the research labs on this island. The officials did not want this connection to be discovered by the public, so to divert attention away from the Colonel and to put the blame somewhere else, the government officials then conducted raids on the offices of all the Lyme doctors in the area. A particularly famous lyme doctor, Dr. Glen Klinner, was arrested and taken to some unknown location. The Colonel had been a patient of Dr. Klinner and the official government lie stated that Dr. Klinner had given the Colonel specific drugs which caused the colonel to commit this desperate act of what the government called "terrorism", against the United States. Congressman McDonald then became involved in this developing saga, as Dr. Klinner and his wife Fran, were very close friends of the Congressman. In the meantime Susan Collins was still having problems trying to get her child, Toby, diagnosed. Susan returned to work at Plum Island where her bosses complained of all the time she had taken off to be with her sick son. They were suspicious and wondered why she hadn't been on the ferry that fateful afternoon. Finally, Toby was diagnosed with Lyme disease and Babesiosis. Susan had difficulty finding a local doctor to continue Lyme treatment because all the Lyme doctors in the area had been arrested. While Susan is struggling to save her son's life, Congressman McDonald is trying to find where his friend, Dr. Klinner, had been taken to. The Congressman held press conferences to inform his constituents as to what was happening. McDonald received information which led him to realize that Lyme disease may have actually originated at and spread from Plum Island. As the story evolves, many of the characters are connected, share information and together they fight for the Truth to be revealed. Sometimes the reader may be able to discern where the plot is headed and other times he may not.......especially near the end. I feel that there is an important lesson to be learned from this book. The main idea I came away with was that we have to come together, we have to do what's right and we need to ask God for guidance, before it's too late. This book encompasses many aspects of what is really taking place in our world and I think we need to heed the author's warnings. The Poison Plum is very well written and includes all the essential elements of a spellbinding thriller. The above review was contributed by: Marjorie Tietjen: Marjorie is a freelance investigative journalist with a B.S. in nutrition. She writes on various topics but has a special interest in public health, education and awareness. Her writings can be found online and in several print publications. She also reviews books for Bookpleasures.
3 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
author's politics are glaringly self-contradictory,
By E. Fidler (San Diego, CA USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Poison Plum (Hardcover)
I wanted to like this book, which begins as grippingly as any Robin Cook thriller. But the book's large flaws quickly appeared: lack of editing; the author's uninformed political bias; and character thought-monologues that don't ring true. The author has his characters say and think in very cliched paragraphs that no one in real life would use. As the story progresses, it becomes more unbelievable--Roberts simply can't help himself enough to hide his politics, or his glee when someone gets his comeuppance. Many dead horses are flogged throughout the course of the book: when a good guy scores a point against a bad guy, the good guy (at least in his/her head) keeps on kicking them when they're down.Unfortunately, Roberts wants to have his politics both ways: he blames everything he despises on the "liberals", even when the actions are those of Republicans. For example, he clearly hates the Patriot Act, but blames it on the "liberal New World Order"; he repeatedly refers to the post-Clinton presidency as the New World Order--he just can't face facts enough to call the post-Clinton president a Republican or conservative. I hate to break the news to him, but the New World Order is outdated by 10 to 15 years as a concept, let alone a meaningful label. In another whopper, Roberts calls the ACLU responsible for "the most violations" against the Constitution! I guess he thinks the Bill of Rights (which it is the ACLU's purpose to defend) should never have been appended to the Constitution. (Perhaps he thinks the ACLU authored the Patriot Act.) Roberts repeatedly portrays "liberal media" as opposing a rogue Congressman's attempts to investigate illegal arrests, searches, seizures, and imprisonment of U.S. citizens at Guantanamo Bay. Hello! Since when would a truly "liberal" reporter object to Congress trying to expose illegal actions by the Bush administration?! Roberts gets it backwards, apparently blinded by his political resentments against Clinton. Before the book descends into excessive preachiness--and a rushed ending that's pure fantasy--I was caught up in the sick revelation that Lyme disease was intentionally government-engineered from syphilis. My government scares me, but not because it's "not conservative enough".
2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The Poison Plum: True Fiction,
This review is from: The Poison Plum (Hardcover)
Beginning quite literally with a bang, Les Roberts' novel The Poison Plum is a whirlwind of suspense centered on the battle for truth in a country where lies and manipulation reign over justice and disclosure. The book follows Susan Collins, a single mother working at the Plum Island Animal Disease Research Center in Connecticut whose son Toby is suffering from a myriad of symptoms that seem to evade a definitive diagnosis. Meanwhile, a well-respected Colonel on the verge of death from a mysteriously debilitating illness decides to take justice into his own hands. When it is subsequently discovered by the authorities that the Colonel suffered from an often misdiagnosed and elusive Lyme disease infection, the response of the government is to raid the offices and homes of Lyme disease specialists and indefinitely detain the Colonel's personal physician at an unknown location. As news of the unlawful detainments surface, one lone moral congressman decides to take up the battle to release one of his closest friends who had been caught up in the sweep, but he and his dedicated team soon find that the implications of their research has high reaching tentacles and that they must battle through a web of deceit and cover-ups.The events are rapid fire, and as more characters are introduced the plot thickens as they discover imperative historical links that reveal a darker side of the United States government's disease research. With witty dialogue and erudite characters, the book is a pleasure for the mind. Far from simplistic, the dialogue reflects the fervent mind of the author, and be advised this book is not for those averse to dictionaries. The characters are diverse and intense, and express great complexity through extensive dialogue. Moreover, the characters are heartfelt and real and the urge to sympathize with their plight comes easily. From the fiery journalist Macintosh McAdams and moral Congressman Harry McDonald to the self-sacrificing Cathy Collins and cunning Erin Giblon all the way to the excessively wicked heads of the CIA, DHS, and FBI---the whole spectrum of human personalities is covered. These aren't your average characters; they are exceptionally extreme in their respective fields with the good being exceeding good and wicked being intolerably evil. Roberts has drawn a line in the sand, and the reader is not left with any grey area but must choose from either side of the clearly defined line---black or white, right or wrong, good or evil. Roberts displays almost prophetic insight at certain points in the novel especially considering the time period in which it was written. Published in 2006, the novel had been worked on for several years prior so the content is especially shocking given what has come to light since the book was written. Though not quite Orwellian in nature, the framework for corruption within the US governmental agencies was outlined in The Poison Plum, and recent events can even be looked at as eerily fulfilling of the situations in the novel. The old adage that truth is truly stranger than fiction rings loudly in Roberts' work, and valid concerns as to the nature of those tasked with protecting us are poignantly raised. The ethical concern of how much power an authority should be allowed to exert over its subordinates is a recurring philosophical theme, as are the questions of individual rights versus collective rights, the alleged transparency of government programs, and the fairness of military tribunals. Through his characters Roberts exerts a curious case that ties Lyme disease to a much larger conspiracy that seems too debauched to be true at first, but makes sense when history is taken into account. The coverage of historically documented events gives credence to Roberts' seemingly wild claims that the origins of Lyme disease have its roots not in nature, but in a lab manned by scientists operating under the veil of national security. There is nothing new under the sun, and Roberts emphatically tells how a basic look at this nation's history proves just that, and how the refusal to learn from history will ultimately doom us to repeat it.
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