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Healer  By  cover art

Healer

By: Carol Wiley Cassella
Narrated by: Alyssa Bresnahan
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Publisher's summary

Carol Wiley Cassella burst onto the literary scene with her debut novel Oxygen, which became a national best seller and won reams of critical praise. In this engaging follow-up, a Seattle physician has to reevaluate life and career when her husband’s business crashes. Through this tale of love and medical wonder, Cassella uses her 25 years of experience in the medical industry to inform a work of emotional distinction and penetrating insight.

Listen to Oxygen.
©2010 Carol Wiley Cassella (P)2010 Recorded Books, LLC

Critic reviews

"Claire Boehning faces a bleak future when her privileged life ends abruptly in Cassella's second novel (after Oxygen). Addison, her biochemist husband, created a lucrative drug that secured the family's fortunes, but when tests on a new drug go awry and Addison's backing disappears, he loses everything. After the couple is forced to move from Seattle with daughter Jory, 14, to live in a rural, ramshackle house originally bought as a fixer-upper project when money was not an issue, Addison travels in search of new investors. Claire, meanwhile, searches for a position as a doctor, a profession she left after Jory's birth…. Cassella (a real-life doctor) takes a hard look at a faulty health-care system to illustrate the power of money and class in this timely and multifaceted novel." (Publishers Weekly)

What listeners say about Healer

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  • Overall
    5 out of 5 stars

Entertaining and tightly plotted

This book made me want to stay in the car and keep listening even after arriving home! Characters are fleshed-out and the heroine is admirable despite events that threaten her idealistic yet somehow practical approach to motherhood, medicine, and her marriage. She keeps doing the right thing, most of the time. Narration is excellent.

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  • Overall
    5 out of 5 stars
  • Performance
    5 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars

First book of Three Winners

I was enthralled from the first page to the end. The book covered both a career and a location which were new to me.

A bit difficult to obtain, as it is not readily available here on the East Coast. Worth the search!

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  • Overall
    1 out of 5 stars
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    1 out of 5 stars
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    2 out of 5 stars

A victim approach to life

I listened to the entire book because of other enthusiastic reviews. In addition, the medical details were interesting and had authenticity because the author was a medical doctor herself. One aspect that worked well was the description of third world medicine in the Land of Wealth. But generally, the characters were heavy on detail but this didn't result in them having depth nor were they engaging or interesting.

Despite interesting and well crafted passages which offered insights into family dynamics, the book was pervaded by gloom and helplessness -- victims. This was underlined by the reader who labored her way through the book, sounding on the edge of despair, yet revealed a capacity for positive voices when it came to the dialogue.

Anyway, I got through the book. I rather suspect the author wanted it to be ultimately inspiring through demonstrating the adaptability of humans and the social ignorance of her own country, but I don't feel that she succeeded.

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