A doctor seeking revenge on abusers becomes a target herself in Rubin’s medical thriller.
Hope Sullivan is a Boston doctor who’s carved out a new role for herself on the side. She has a reputation for being kind, yet, after her long days at the clinic, she engages in something she’s dubbed “tune-ups.” On a typical tune-up, she seeks revenge against a man she believes to be abusing his wife. She doesn’t kill him—just kidnaps him, and tortures him a little, forcing him to say that he won’t hurt his wife again. (“I have come to believe, strongly, that sometimes the brutes, the bullies, the assholes out there need a little mental reshaping.”) Hope is quite self-aware, recognizing that she could take her campaign too far; she worries that she herself is becoming a monster. But after suffering a great deal of personal loss, including of her parents and her fiance, Hope is convinced that she’s justly making the world a better place. But Hope has a stalker: Menacing messages start arriving from someone blaming Hope for the death of a relative. She racks her brain, trying to figure out which of her former patients it could be, but comes up empty. Everything changes one night when she finds herself having to fight to save her own life from a similarly vengeful attacker. Rubin’s revenge thriller is fast-paced and full of plenty of unexpected twists and turns. A physician herself, the author has the knowledge to keep even some of the more implausible scenarios grounded within a medically authentic framework. The novel is a true page-turner and is just disturbing enough to keep things exciting until the end. The characterization of a protagonist with dark motives is well done, but her confrontations with others who are similarly motivated make this story truly memorable.
A compelling, eminently readable medical thriller that’s both enjoyable and alarming.