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  • Published: 1 June 2010
  • ISBN: 9780099527527
  • Imprint: Windmill Books
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 320
  • RRP: $32.99

Beat The Reaper




A dark and original thriller - House on speed

The Doctor will see you now....

Meet Peter Brown, a young Manhattan ER Doctor who has a past he'd prefer to stay hidden. When a figure from the old days emerges it looks increasingly unlikely that his secret will stay intact.
Nicholas LoBrutto, aka Eddy Squillante, is given three months to live, and it's clear to Peter that the clock is ticking for both of them. He must do whatever it takes to keep him - and his patient - alive.

It's time to beat the reaper....

  • Published: 1 June 2010
  • ISBN: 9780099527527
  • Imprint: Windmill Books
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 320
  • RRP: $32.99

About the author

Josh Bazell

Josh Bazell is a doctor and novelist. He has a BA in writing from Brown University and an MD from Columbia. He has worked as a screenwriter, and while in medical school investigated suspicious deaths for the Chief Medical Examiner of the City of New York. He is the author of one novel, Beat the Reaper, and is currently a resident at the University of California, San Francisco.

Praise for Beat The Reaper

Beat the Reaper is way cool and ice cold. A ferocious read

Don Winslow

Beat the Reaper is a blast. Josh Bazell blew me away with this story that is as relentless as a bullet

Michael Connelly

This cross between House and The Sopranos kept me squeamishly reading...original and funny

Literary Review

Hold on to your hats. Josh Bazell's first novel is a roller-coaster ride from the very first page, fast, furious, and - believe it or not - funny...A cross between ER and the Sopranos, this is House on speed, with a little Dexter thrown in and wisecracking dialogue to boot. It's breathtakingly accomplished for a debut. Bazell is a name to watch

Daily Mail

Funny and outrageous, with a great central character and the energy and frenetic pace sustained throughout...Determinedly cynical about the US medical system and with informative footnotes

Guardian

The novel speeds you like an emergency-room patient on a gurney through 300 pages of adrenalin-fuelled action, medical drama, mob dealings and stomach-turning violence

Scotland on Sunday

This is a gripping debut thriller, clever, imaginative and with plenty of detail drawn from Bazell's own career as a doctor

Waterstone's Books Quarterly

A ferocious firecracker, ablaze with hilarious one-liners, plot switchbacks, gore, sex and even a James Bond-style tank full of sharks...Josh Bazell manages to make hitman/doctor hero Peter Brown a sympathetic, even lovable leading man of such intensity, he practically drags the reader along by the hair

Big Issue

If Tarantino were a novelist, this would be the book that he would write. Fast-paced, effortlessly cool and with the requisite amount of gun-slingers...Read it!

Your Choice Magazine

if this book doesn't take the crime and thriller world by storm, there's no justice. What marks the book out from the rest of an increasingly overcrowded field is its vibrant, glittering prose - streaked through with a mordant wit (highlighted by a series of pithy - and highly entertaining - footnotes; an unusual element in the thriller genre).The plot is highly original... Josh Bazell, as Beat the Reaper, demonstrates, is the real deal

Barry Forshaw, Amazon.co.uk

Ferocious...Cruelly funny and inventive...The book is fuelled by flights of nihilistic wit and by an exuberant contempt for criminals, the law, rednecks, the US healthcare system, the British, anti-Semites and anyone else who happens to be in the way...[Bazell] is clearly a writer, as very few in the field are

Sean O'Brien, Times Literary Supplement

Hip, violent, and funny, Beat the Reaper is a very engaging and furiously fast read

therapsheet.blogspot.com

Josh Bazell justifies the hype surrounding his debut novel to formulate a clever, imaginative piece tracking 24 hours in the life of the likeable Peter Brown...driven by fast -paced narrative and some neat plot twists that engage the reader's interest to the final page

The Press Association

Bazell is a natural storyteller and makes this thriller fast, funny and believable

Sun

It's the kind of stuff you should roll your eyes at, but it's too much fun to do anything but keep flipping pages to see where Bazell will take Peter next. And there are more pages yet to come, apparently; this is merely the first installment in a planned series, with a Leonardo DiCaprio-led movie also on the way. Read Beat the Reaper now, so you know what all the fuss is about later

Bullz Eye

Maybe not quite blown away so much as having my jaw drop to the floor on several occasions and having to endure the snap as it reconnected with the rest of my face. Beat the Reaper is like having a bucket of ice cold water poured over you - shocking, invigorating and certain to get your attention - but leaving you shivering and feeling a bit queasy after the initial assault on your senses is over

The Truth About Books

High octane thriller that moves along at a cracking pace

Bookseller

Fast, fun, furious, fierce...or better yet, stop reading the accolades for Beat the Reaper, open up to page one, and start reading. See you at the cash register

Harlan Coben

Outrageously funny ... This may be the most imaginative, albeit the most violent and profanity-laden, debuts of the new year ... If you don't like extreme gun violence, blow-by-blow descriptions of surgical procedures performed by doped-up, angry doctors, the lack of care administered by bitter nurses, misdiagnoses and a huge dose of vulgarity, this novel is not for you. If, however, you can take all of the above, you'll be treated to a story that gets at the heart of one man's immense loneliness and heartbreak. Be warned: One of the final scenes reaches new heights for gory. How then, you might ask, does this novel earn its comedic stripes? Bazell, a medical resident at the University of California, brings a Scrubs mind-set to his story and jacks it up to an outrageous level that will never be seen on network TV

USA Today

An unusually talented writer...Genuinely entertaining...The story is so engaging that you don't want to be yanked out of it...Darkly comic...Bazell has a knack for breathing new life into the most timeworn genre conventions....The climax of Beat the Reaper finds Brown locked in a medical freezer waiting for his arch-nemesis to arrive and finish him off. The plan Brown concocts to save himself is the novel's most original flourish. It is also completely outrageous, so much so that I had to stop and think about whether I could really suspend my disbelief. In the end I decided that Bazell had more than earned my indulgence as a reader. If there's a better recommendation for a story than that, I don't know what it is

New York Times Book Review

Suffering from Post-Holiday Stress Syndrome? Dr Josh Bazell has the prescription...he has written the first flat-out entertaining novel of 2009...It's an ingenious premise for a thriller, and Bazell pulls it off...Told with exquisite acerbic humour without sacrificing intrigue or tension...Beat the Reaper only gets better, turn by turn, page by page. Savvy and savagely diverting, it's a Tarantino movie made with Scorsese looking over his shoulder

New York Daily News

[a] breakneck cross between a hospital drama, "The Godfather" and a Quentin Tarantino film

Bloomberg.com

A propulsive, savvy read featuring characters both well shaded and shady, this debut thriller by a physician polymath with a BA in writing from Brown also offers the garnish du jour in the form of elaborate and funny footnotes (à la David Foster Wallace). You can prescribe this to fans of Carl Hiaasen and quirky abrasive fiction

Library Journal

[a] quirky and darkly humourous novel... Beat the Reaper is a wonderfully engaging novel that starts with a full-on beginning and doesn't let up until the end

Crimesquad.com

This is the second funniest health care-based fiction to come out of the United States this year after the Republican Party's descriptions of the NHS

Daily Telegraph