Friday, October 30, 2020

The Hostage Heart

 

By Gerald Green


Terrorists burst into an operating room and hold the patient and doctors hostage for $10,000,000. The terrorists have a couple of their people planted among the hospital staff who have been working at the hospital for several weeks which gives the terrorists an inside edge. 

Dr. Eric Lake is the heart surgeon who is forced to perform surgery on the wealthy man the terrorists have targeted for extortion. The funny thing is the patient, Tench, is already under anesthesia and remains unconscious during the whole attack. He won't know anything about it until he wakes up, if he is lucky enough to survive the surgery and the terrorists. 

The terrorist are a bunch of misfits who have decided they will reform capitalist society by arousing the downtrodden peoples of the world. They call themselves the Wretched of the Earth. Needless to say, the plan blows up in their faces when they try to escape the hospital with the ransom.


This was an OK story. Written back in the 1970s, one of the main characters, Dr. Lake, is constantly lighting up a cigarette and no one ever questions this heart doctor as to the wisdom of smoking when he knows, I assume, that smoking is damaging to the heart, among other things. So that was a bit of an off note. Was the author trying to make his novel appealing to big tobacco? 

But over all this is just another typical hostage-taking type thriller, nothing particularly special. It was apparently made into a TV movie starring Bradford Dillman as Dr. Lake in 1977 and Stephen Davies as the terrorist leader, John Trask.

I wonder if Dr. Lake was as much of a tobacco fiend in the movie as he was in the book?



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