BY: DAN SHINE

In a hospital, young residents are the princes of night. It’s their magic kingdom, full of terrors, tall stories, and urban legends. But night is always a wild card, and now at College Hospital in Manhattan, nights have turned from magic to horror. One patient after another is being murdered. Strange nurses seem to be involved, but whoever is doing this, Amir Baum, brand new intern, is getting blamed for having a “fund of knowledge deficit.” His girlfriend Grace Paine, statistician and more than eccentric, is on the case to clear his name, but the killings also seem to involve a nearby hospital chain. Why are the sickest patients dying at one place and the least sick at another? How are the fatal complications being chosen? And what is College Hospital’s aging computer guru Evelyn Pearson, the disappointed romantic, up to?

TAYLOR JONES SAYS: In Quality Murders by Dan Shine, Amir Baum is a new resident at College Hospital. And when his patients start dying, he gets the blame. His girlfriend Grace is a statistician and sees the deaths as something much more sinister than Amir’s lack of medical ability. She begins to investigate, and that starts a chain of events that even Grace can’t predict. As the bodies pile up, Grace resorts to desperate measures, and so do the villains.

The story is technical in places, but the author tells it with a subtle humor that is delightful, even if it is hard to follow on occasion. It is incredibly complicated, fascinating, and entertaining. Once you pick it up, you won’t be able to put it down.

REGAN MURPHY SAYS: Quality Murders by Dan Shine is an interesting book. College Hospital is experiencing some unexpected deaths among their patients, and thus their quality rating—the number of expected deaths vs. the number of real deaths—is spiking, giving them low quality ratings, which can ultimately affect the amount of money they get from the government and Medicare. Three of the deaths are patients of a new resident at the hospital, Amir Baum. But his girlfriend Grace, a statistician who is a lot smarter than she looks, gets suspicious and begins to investigate, uncovering more than one wicked plot designed to bring the hospital down. The only problem is the people involved will obviously kill to keep their activities secret and Grace has just painted a great big bulls-eye on her back.

Quality murders is a well-written, complex, highly entertaining medical thriller that approaches murder and mayhem from a whole new angle. The story will keep you on the edge of your seat from beginning to end.