Showing posts with label Harry Kraus M.D.. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Harry Kraus M.D.. Show all posts

Friday, June 17, 2016

Medical Judgement by Harry Kraus, MD (Review)



  • Paperback: 320 pages
  • Publisher: Abingdon Press (May 17, 2016)
  • ISBN-13: 978-1630881207



  • Someone is after Dr. Sarah Gordon. They’ve stalked her and set a fire at her home. Trying to recover from the traumatic deaths of her husband and infant daughter is tough enough, but she has no idea what will come next. Her late husband’s best friend and a recovering alcoholic detective are trying to solve the mystery before it’s too late, but both appear to be vying for her affection as well. Sarah finds herself in constant fear as the process plays out.

    As the threats on her life continue to escalate, so do the questions: Who is doing this? Why are they after her? And with her only help being unreliable suitors in competition with each other, whom can she really trust?

    My Review:

    This was an okay Christian mystery/suspense book. I did not enjoy it as much as some of his previous books. This was  a medical drama only in the fact the main character Dr. Sarah Gordon is an ER doctor. The faith element is well developed. I was kept guessing until the end on who was stalking her. Dr. Gordon has two different possible love interests. One is her recently deceased husband's best friend and the other a detective. The romance could have been more developed. There was also a lot of repetition throughout the book like her husband being dead eight months. My favorite series of his is the Code Blue series.




    I'm a retired physician who is now writing. I also stay busy being a husband and grandfather, working on my golf game, and doing the hundred-and-one other things that retired people do.

    I got into non-medical writing after the death of my first wife with my book, THE TENDER SCAR: LIFE AFTER THE DEATH OF A SPOUSE. I'm gratified that it continues to help those who have lost a loved one.

    From that point, I moved into writing fiction. Thus far I've had seven novels of medical suspense published: CODE BLUE, MEDICAL ERROR, DIAGNOSIS DEATH, and LETHAL REMEDY were the first four. The second and third books listed were named finalists for the ACFW Carol Award and Romantic Times' Best Inspirational Novel respectively, and LETHAL REMEDY won the Selah Award.

    Then came STRESS TEST (also a finalist for Romantic Times' Best Inspirational Novel), HEART FAILURE, CRITICAL CONDITION, FATAL TRAUMA, and my latest, MIRACLE DRUG (which made the CBA bestseller list). I've also self-published a novella, RX MURDER, which is currently available for Kindle and in hard copy.

    You can follow me on my blog (rmabry.blogspot.com) and my web page (rmabry.com


    Review copy provided by Litfuse in exchange for an honest review.

    Monday, April 21, 2014

    Lip Reading by Harry Kraus

    This week, the
    Christian Fiction Blog Alliance
    is introducing
    Lip Reading
    David C. Cook (March 1, 2014)
    by
    Harry Kraus


    ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

    A Word from Harry:

    I started writing my first novel during my last year of surgery training at UK. I was a chief resident, and started writing Stainless Steal Hearts in a call room at the Veteran's Administration Hospital in Lexington. It was a crazy time to write! I had a very demanding schedule, often spending days and nights in the hospital. I had two sons at that time, and I recognized the wisdom in my wife's urging: "Now doesn't seem the right time for this dream."

    My experience as a writer is far from typical. Having received my formal training in biology and chemistry and medicine, my only preparation for a writing career was a love for reading. The longest thing I'd written before my first novel was a term paper in undergraduate school. My first novel was accepted by Crossway Books and published in 1994, and it wasn't until after I had FOUR published novels that I even opened a book of instruction about the craft of writing fiction. This is not what I recommend to others! Yes, I was successful, but I was bending the "rules" without knowing it. I had a natural talent for plotting, but I realize my initial success may have stunted my growth as a writer. I'd have made faster progress if I'd have gone to the fiction teachers sooner.

    I have three sons: Joel, Evan, and Samuel. Look closely in all of my books and you'll see them there. My lovely wife, Kris, provides the basic composition for all those beautiful, athletic, dedicated women in my novels.

    ABOUT THE BOOK

    She Could Save Millions, or Save Herself

    She just needs a little longer. She’s really close. Dr. Rebecca Jackson, a medical researcher, stands on the verge of a breakthrough that will transform medicine. But she soon discovers the reason behind the miraculous progress in her research, and it leaves her with a nearly impossible choice . . . and little time to decide. More than her research is at stake. And more threatens it than this latest revelation. Something she’s tried hard to cover up. There is a high cost to some things in medicine and it’s not always the patient who pays. Can Rebecca find the faith and wisdom she needs to make the right call? The clock is ticking and the pressure is on.


    If you would like to read the first chapter of Lip Reading, go HERE.

    Wednesday, June 12, 2013

    An Open Heart by Harry Kraus

    This week, the
    Christian Fiction Blog Alliance
    is introducing
    An Open Heart
    David C. Cook (June 1, 2013)
    by
    Harry Kraus


    ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

    A Word from Harry:

    I started writing my first novel during my last year of surgery training at UK. I was a chief resident, and started writing Stainless Steal Hearts in a call room at the Veteran's Administration Hospital in Lexington. It was a crazy time to write! I had a very demanding schedule, often spending days and nights in the hospital. I had two sons at that time, and I recognized the wisdom in my wife's urging: "Now doesn't seem the right time for this dream."

    My experience as a writer is far from typical. Having received my formal training in biology and chemistry and medicine, my only preparation for a writing career was a love for reading. The longest thing I'd written before my first novel was a term paper in undergraduate school. My first novel was accepted by Crossway Books and published in 1994, and it wasn't until after I had FOUR published novels that I even opened a book of instruction about the craft of writing fiction. This is not what I recommend to others! Yes, I was successful, but I was bending the "rules" without knowing it. I had a natural talent for plotting, but I realize my initial success may have stunted my growth as a writer. I'd have made faster progress if I'd have gone to the fiction teachers sooner.

    I have three sons: Joel, Evan, and Samuel. Look closely in all of my books and you'll see them there. My lovely wife, Kris, provides the basic composition for all those beautiful, athletic, dedicated women in my novels.

    ABOUT THE BOOK

    Their Messages—From Beyond the Grave—Might Destroy Him ...

    They hover between life and death, their hearts stopped on the surgery table. And the messages Dr. Jace Rawlings’ open-heart surgery patients bring back from beyond the grave cannot be ignored. For they predict the deaths of people around him, and point a finger of suspicion straight at him.

    It thrusts Jace into a firestorm of controversy and danger. A maeltsrom blown by the darker winds of political intrigue and spiritual warfare. And the forces working against him will do anything to stop him from uncovering a truth they will kill to hide. He’d come to Kenya to establish a heart-surgery program for the poor. But what he will find in that place where he grew up will put everything at risk–his marriage, his career . . . his life.

    If you would like to read the first chapter of An Open Heart, go HERE.

    Sunday, September 23, 2012

    A Heartbeat Away by Harry Kraus (Review)

    This week, the
    Christian Fiction Blog Alliance
    is introducing
    A Heartbeat Away
    David C. Cook (September 1, 2012)
    by
    Harry Kraus


    ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

    A Word from Harry:

    I started writing my first novel during my last year of surgery training at UK. I was a chief resident, and started writing Stainless Steal Hearts in a call room at the Veteran's Administration Hospital in Lexington. It was a crazy time to write! I had a very demanding schedule, often spending days and nights in the hospital. I had two sons at that time, and I recognized the wisdom in my wife's urging: "Now doesn't seem the right time for this dream."

    My experience as a writer is far from typical. Having received my formal training in biology and chemistry and medicine, my only preparation for a writing career was a love for reading. The longest thing I'd written before my first novel was a term paper in undergraduate school. My first novel was accepted by Crossway Books and published in 1994, and it wasn't until after I had FOUR published novels that I even opened a book of instruction about the craft of writing fiction. This is not what I recommend to others! Yes, I was successful, but I was bending the "rules" without knowing it. I had a natural talent for plotting, but I realize my initial success may have stunted my growth as a writer. I'd have made faster progress if I'd have gone to the fiction teachers sooner.

    I have three sons: Joel, Evan, and Samuel. Look closely in all of my books and you'll see them there. My lovely wife, Kris, provides the basic composition for all those beautiful, athletic, dedicated women in my novels.


    ABOUT THE BOOK

    When a brilliant surgeon undergoes a heart transplant, her life transforms as she begins experiencing memories of a murder she never witnessed.

    The residents worship her. Nurses step out of her way. Her colleagues respect and sometimes even fear her. But surgeon Tori Taylor never expected to end up on this side of the operating table.

    Now she has a new heart. This life that was formerly controlled and predictable is now chaotic. Dr. Taylor had famously protected herself from love or commitment, but her walls are beginning to crumble.

    And strangest of all, memories surface that will take her on a journey out of the operating room and into a murder investigation.

    Where there once was a heart of stone, there is a heart of flesh. And there is no going back.


    If you'd like to read the first chapter excerpt of A Heartbeat Away, go HERE.

    My Review:
    I loved this book. It was well written with good characters and plot. It held my attention from page one. Dr. Tori Taylor is a oncology surgeon known for her cold heart except with her patients. When she needs a heart transplant she is forced to have therapy  for that and her manner with her fellow employees especially the nurses. Tori is a perfectionist and requires others around her to be like that also. It tends to cause her only problems and she only has one real friend. This friend will not give up on her and has known her since her rough childhood. There is a subplot involving a teen boy and girl that ends up tying into the mystery aspect of the book. This is a Christian contemporary medical  mystery suspense romance book all tied in one. Highly Recommended! :)

    Thursday, June 10, 2010

    The Six-Liter Club by Harry Kraus M.D. (Review)





    Paperback: 364 pages
    Publisher: Howard Books; Original edition (April 6, 2010)
    ISBN-13: 978-1416577973



    About the book:

    ELUSIVE WHISPERS, A DARK CLOSET, STRONG ARMS... DOES SHE EVEN WANT TO REMEMBER?

    Camille Weller has arrived as the first African-American attending in the trauma service of the Medical College of Virginia. Never mind that the locker rooms are labeled "doctors" and "nurses" rather than "men" and "women" or that her dark skin communicates "incapable" to many of her white male colleagues in the OR. Camille has battled prejudices her entire career, but those battles were small spats compared to what she faces now.

    When a colleague discovers a lump in her breast, she believes Dr. Camille Weller is the best doctor for her. Together, they decide on a course of treatment that bucks the established medical system, keeping Camille firmly in the cross hairs of male surgeons already riddled with skepticism and suspicion.


    Her success as a surgeon is jeopardized further when dark whispers from her childhood in Africa plague Camille’s thoughts. Bewildering panic attacks instill fear in a surgeon bent on maintaining the control, pace, and direction of her own life. Unable to shake the flashes of memory, Camille is forced to face a past she has not acknowledged since the death of her father on an African mission field. Who was he? Who was she? And why would either of those answers affect her present?

    My Review:
    I have mixed feelings about this book. Overall I thought it was a good book and held my attention from the first page. The plot line was unique and set in the Southeast US in 1984. Camille is a half white half African (Congo) surgeon and faces racism everyday. Her parents were missionaries in the Congo and were murdered when she was ten. She was sent to live in the US with her Aunt Jeanne who raised her white. She never talked to her about her time in the Congo. When Camille starts having flashbacks she freaks out because it affects her at work too. Another main plot line is her relationship with her boyfriend. This is where I became unhappy. It is very heavy on the sensual side and a big part of the plot is how to help her have premarital s*x with him. It is implied that it makes it easier for him to cheat on her. There is barely a spiritual side to this book.Otherwise this was a really good book. I would not recommend it to Christian fiction readers. I would consider it to be a mainstream book and as such it is very good.

    About the author:
    Harry Kraus has brought surgical skill to medical missions on four continents. Most recently, he returned to Somalia for a short stay. His family (wife, Kris, and three sons) is contemplating a return to Kenya for three years. He could stay in Virginia, building his surgical practice, storing wealth and acquiring house after house, car after car - but that isn't where Harry's heart lies.

    Harry Kraus watched the Twin Towers fall on 9/11. He was at Ground Zero providing medical services to those who managed to escape the falling buildings. He saw firsthand the result of human relationships that lack love for fellow man. He determined to spend his life pouring love into human hearts. In Africa, he is often asked by Muslim patients why he would come halfway around the world to take care of them for no pay. Harry smiles. He tells them about the unconditional love He received from a Savior.

    Thank you Glass Road PR for my review copy.

    Monday, March 30, 2009

    Salty Like Blood by Harry Kraus, M.D.

    It is time for a FIRST Wild Card Tour book review! If you wish to join the FIRST blog alliance, just click the button. We are a group of reviewers who tour Christian books. A Wild Card post includes a brief bio of the author and a full chapter from each book toured. The reason it is called a FIRST Wild Card Tour is that you never know if the book will be fiction, non~fiction, for young, or for old...or for somewhere in between! Enjoy your free peek into the book!

    You never know when I might play a wild card on you!


    Today's Wild Card author is:


    and the book:


    Salty Like Blood

    Howard Books (March 24, 2009)


    ABOUT THE AUTHOR:



    Harry Kraus, M.D., is a board-certified surgeon whose contemporary fiction, including Stainless Steel Hearts, is flavored with medical realism. A bestselling author, he has also written two works of nonfiction. He currently lives with his family in Kenya, where he is serving as a full-time medical missionary.

    Visit the author's website.

    Product Details:

    List Price: $13.99
    Paperback: 352 pages
    Publisher: Howard Books (March 24, 2009)
    Language: English
    ISBN-10: 1416577890
    ISBN-13: 978-1416577898

    AND NOW...THE FIRST CHAPTER:


    Rachel and I tumbled into the tall grass at the bottom of the hill, having survived yet another Daddy-just-one-more sled ride from the edge of our front porch. I collapsed on my back, trying to find oxygen between gasps of laughter and looked up at the summer sky. My daughter, with limbs sprawled in a wide “X” and her head against my foot, shouted her delight toward the house. “We did it! We made it!”

    Seconds before, airborne and soaring toward record distance, Rachel reached for an octave above the normal human voice range, squealing a note that rang on in my head and I suspected invited half the neighborhood’s canine population to play. I laughed and put my fingers in my ears, rolling them in an exaggerated twist as if she’d deafened me.

    She moved to lay her head upon my chest and quieted herself there, listening to my racing heart.

    I stroked her hair, inhaled the scent of mown grass, and nestled my head back into the tickle of green.

    “Is it okay?” she asked.

    “It’s okay.”

    “It’s too fast,” she said, raising up and pushing a bony elbow into my gut.

    “Oh so now you’re the doctor.”

    She smiled. “Someday,” she said. “For now, you’re the doctor.”

    “Don’t worry. I’m okay.” I scowled at my first-grader. “Really.”

    We rested together, staring at the sky full of clouds of hippopotamus, horses, rockets—whatever Rachel imagined. Mostly I gasped and oohed. In a moment, I found myself blinking away tears, overwhelmed with the enormity of it all.

    It was so ordinary. A summer Saturday morning without an agenda. It’s hard for me to describe beyond the sense I had of emerging, as if I’d been submerged for so long, and now, just to play and laugh and roll in the grass seemed a joy that would burst my heart. I smiled, taking it in, gulping in ordinary life as if I’d never have a chance again.

    As Rachel chatted on with her running commentary of sky castles, fiery dragons and fairies, other images drifted through my mind, pictures of painful chapters that set my current joy into sharp contrast. Traveling with Joanne through the dark tunnel of post-partum depression. My mother’s battle with cancer. Memories of an intensive care unit visit while I was the too-young patient, watching my own heart monitor and wondering if life would be cut short.

    Joanne’s voice swept me into the here and now. “What’s going on?”

    I looked up to see her standing on the covered porch, eyeing a bottle of vegetable oil sitting on the white railing.

    Rachel lifted her head. Her blond hair dotted with grass seed. “We’re sledding, Mommy.”

    Joanne’s hands rested firmly on her hips. “It’s July, David.” She picked up the bottle. “And I’ve been looking for this.” She was serious, but her eyes betrayed her attempt at scolding me. Her happiness at my delight in our little Rachel couldn't be spoiled by my summer antics.

    I exchanged a mischievous glance with Rachel. She betrayed me in a heartbeat. “It was Daddy’s idea.”

    “Women!” I said, grabbing my daughter by the waist and swinging her around in a circle. “You always stick together!”

    As I trudged up the hill with Rachel folded around my back, I grunted exaggerated puffs. “You’re getting so big.”

    I set her on the top step and kissed her forehead. She started pulling away. “Wait.” I picked at the seeds in her hair.“You’ll need to brush this out.”

    She opted for the shake-it-out method. “I’m a rock star.”

    I smiled. My star. For Joanne and I, Rachel had been the glue that helped us stick together through a valley of misery.

    Joanne reappeared carrying lemonade in tall, sweaty glasses. She handed me one and kissed me. She had thin lips to go with sharp, elegant features, dark eyes alight with mystery, and hair the color of caramel. She could have been a model before big lips became the rage.

    I’d been to hell and back with Joanne, but the last six months, I’d sensed a real change in her. She seemed settled somehow. Content. More romantic toward me—like she had been back in my medical school days. Our relationship, once teetering on the precipice of divorce, was now solidly a safe distance from the edge. I’d seen significant pieces of my life’s puzzle fall together in the last few years. When the marriage one finally clicked into place, everything else brightened with it. It was as if I’d been living my life in black-and-white and someone just invented color.

    I kissed her back, trying to discern her mood. There seemed a surface calm, but I sensed a deeper stirring. I’d become a champion at reading her. I knew the quiet of her bitterness, the bubbly way she prattled on when she felt guilty, and the aloofness that dared me to pursue her into bed. For a moment, our eyes met. It was only a flash, but in that instant, I felt the a foreboding that threatened my wonderful ordinary-life euphoria.

    I took her hand. “What’s up?” She lowered her voice, but even at that volume, sharp irritation cut at the edges of her words, clipping them into little fragments.

    “Your father.”

    I raised my eyebrows in question.

    “His neighbor called.”

    I waited for more, but it seemed the silence only uncapped her annoyance. In a moment, she was on the verge of tears.

    “He always does this. Every time we have plans, he has a crisis.”

    Plans. The practice was dining at the country club tonight.

    I started to protest, but she interrupted, pushing her finger against my lips. “You know they’re going to announce that you’ve made partner.”

    I smiled. Partner. A year early. Just reward for the practice’s highest revenue-producer nine months in a row. Another puzzle piece in my wonderful life about to connect.

    “Which neighbor?”

    “That Somali family,” she said, flipping her hand in the air. “A woman. She has an accent. She said his place is a wreck. He’s ill.” She seemed to hesitate before adding. “He’s asking for you.”

    It was my father’s way. The crab-fisherman wouldn’t pick up the phone and let me know he needed me. He sent word around the block and expected me to show. “Define ‘ill.’ ”

    Joanne imitated the neighbor’s accent. “Mister Gus isn’t eating. He toilets in the bedroom.”

    I groaned. Whatever the neighbor meant, I knew it couldn’t be good. I walked into the house to my study and picked up the phone. I was listening to the endless ringing on the other end when Joanne entered. “Not a good sign,” I said. “He doesn’t pick up.”

    “What are we going to do?”

    I looked at my wife. Petite. Strong. And so able to read my thoughts.

    She threw up her hands. “We’re going to the shore,” she said. “Just like that.”

    I nodded. I was predictable. Family first. We had to go.

    She glared at me. I read the silence, loud and clear. That’s why I love you . . . and hate you.

    “I’ll call Jim. The practice will understand.”

    Joanne shook her head. “This is your night, David. The moment you’ve been waiting for. And you throw it away because of family.”

    I couldn’t say anything. She had me pegged.

    “I’ll see if Kristine will take Rachel for the weekend.”

    “Let’s take her with us.”

    Joanne’s face hardened. “With us? That place is so . . . “ She paused, apparently mulling over adjective options. “ . . . crusty.”

    It was the gentlest description of several other options that came to mind.

    “We’ll take care of the crisis and stay at that seaside bed and breakfast. It will be fun. A chance for her to see her grandfather.” I let a hopeful smile tease at the corners of my lips. “Even if he is crusty he does adore her.”

    Joanne sighed in resignation. “Yes he does.” She tipped her glass against mine. “As long as we don’t have to sleep there,” she said, shivering as if that thought was horrifying. She gave me a don’t-even-try-to-cross-me look. “You’re driving.”

    I walked out onto the porch and into the humidity we Virginians call “summer.” As I called for Rachel, I followed the border of the house, my prize lawn soft beneath my bare feet. From her perch on the back deck, my daughter ambushed me with open arms.

    “Can we sled some more?”

    I looked at the blue sky and my Southern Living home, and I pushed aside a fleeting presence. A ripple beneath the calm.

    I’d been through too many hard times to trust the peace. Nothing this great can last forever.

    “We’re going to Grandpa Conners’,” I said, trying my best to sound excited.

    Rachel wrinkled her nose. To her, the shore meant stinky crabs and everything smelling fishy.

    I poked her nose with a finger. “You’re too much like your mother.”

    She poked me back. “You’re too much like your father.”

    A sudden breeze lifted Rachel’s hair against my face. I stopped, looking east. In the distance, a small thundercloud hung over the horizon. Not today. I don’t want to travel the Chesapeake Bay Bridge-Tunnel in the rain.

    My daughter squeezed my neck, bringing a smile to my face and pushing my anxieties aside. I nestled my face into her hair, trying to find an earlobe. She giggled and everything seemed right again.

    Book Summary:

    David Conners, M.D., is on the fast track to creating a perfect life when his seven-year-old daughter disappears. David's all-consuming quest to find her — dead or alive — threatens to destroy everything he has left: his medical practice, his marriage, his integrity, and even his soul.
    If Rachel is dead: Can a parent forgive someone who has done the unthinkable?
    Can David forgive himself?
    If she's alive: Can David find her in time to save her?

    My Review:

    David and Joanne Connors seem to have it all but theirs is a troubled marriage almost from the beginning. After their daughter Rachel is kidnapped things fall apart even more. Jo is ready to move on and accepts that she drowned since they were at a house on the water at the time visiting David's sick father. David is not ready to accept that and is pretty sure she was abducted.He loses his job as a Doctor at a major practice. The whole situation causes major conflict between them and drives them apart. Jo was already fragile mentally anyway and grew up with an overbearing mother while her father is a senator. David keeps searching and lives at his father's house by the water while Jo goes back to work as a nurse and lives at their house in the city. Blake an old flame of Jo's and friend of David's shows back up. While on the island David becomes friends with a Somali woman who lives next door to his father. Does anything happen?

    This is my first Harry Kraus M.D. book but it won't be my last. Salty Like Blood is a riveting book. It held my attention from the beginning to end. It kept me guessing on a few situations too. The ending has twist you might not see coming. The main theme in the book is forgiveness with God and others. The characters and scenery are vivid. The plot is interesting and not completely predictable.

    Classics Club Spin 18

    My Classics Club Spin List for August This is a hodgepodge of books left on my list I made in 2017 for the Classics Club. Tomorrow the clu...