Deep as the Marrow
by F. Paul Wilson
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Like millions of Americans, Dr. John VanDuyne is stunned to watch President Tom Winston announce his plans to legalize narcotics in a radical bid to destroy the power of the drug cartels. Especially since, as Winston's personal physician and a government health spokesman, VanDuyne might have expected some prior warning. And now he's going to be right in the firing line when the uproar begins. For President Winston, his daring plan could turn out to be political suicide. For VanDuvne, it's show more going to be much worse than that. The cartels know the President has to be stopped before his controversial scheme can become law. And VanDuyne is the perfect tool to do it. Only he can get close enough to President Winston to administer a subtle poison without arousing suspicion. And when they snatch his six-year-old daughter Katie and threaten to kill her, VanDuyne would appear to have no choice. show lessTags
Recommendations
Member Reviews
Very good intricate plot. We are introduced to John VanDuyne and his six year old daughter, Katie. John just happens to be the personal physician and friend of the President. The President's main agenda is the decriminalization of drugs. In theory, it may be a good thing for the United States. What does all this have to do with a six year old girl? Read this book and find out. I didn't want to put it down until I knew what happened to Katie, and oh yes, what happened to Poppy. My two favorite characters, Katie and Poppy.
I felt rather mixed on this one. F. Paul Wilson is known for his works of horror--this one has no element of the supernatural but rather is a work of medical suspense/political thriller. American President Thomas Winston calls for the legalization of drugs such as marijuana, cocaine and heroine. A Columbian drug lord, Carlos Salinas, is fearful he could succeed and destroy the very basis of the illegal drug trade. Salinas sets out to assassinate the president through his personal physician, John Van Duyne, having the doctor's six-year-old daughter kidnapped to force him to cooperate.
I got this book years ago and remember enjoying it, and was reviewing it recently to decide whether or not to cull it to free up space in my library. It show more wasn't a good sign that I couldn't remember a thing about it before opening the book again. I'm actually a proponent of drug legalization for many of the reasons Wilson lays out in the book. Nor do I feel it's very preachy in that regard, but I did feel the story was written more to argue for the pro-legalization position rather than growing organically from the premise. I might not have felt that way if so many details didn't feel dated. For instance, the president is counting on the support of Milton Friedman, the famous Nobel Prize winning economist and a former adviser to Ronald Reagan and famed conservative William F. Buckley of National Review. Both men did hold the views presented, but both are also very much dead.
Beyond that, I thought the plot got more and more convoluted and far-fetched as the book went along. I'm not saying this is a turkey. It's by and large a well-written book with likable characters, thought-provoking arguments, and a suspenseful climax. But not, I decided, a keeper. show less
I got this book years ago and remember enjoying it, and was reviewing it recently to decide whether or not to cull it to free up space in my library. It show more wasn't a good sign that I couldn't remember a thing about it before opening the book again. I'm actually a proponent of drug legalization for many of the reasons Wilson lays out in the book. Nor do I feel it's very preachy in that regard, but I did feel the story was written more to argue for the pro-legalization position rather than growing organically from the premise. I might not have felt that way if so many details didn't feel dated. For instance, the president is counting on the support of Milton Friedman, the famous Nobel Prize winning economist and a former adviser to Ronald Reagan and famed conservative William F. Buckley of National Review. Both men did hold the views presented, but both are also very much dead.
Beyond that, I thought the plot got more and more convoluted and far-fetched as the book went along. I'm not saying this is a turkey. It's by and large a well-written book with likable characters, thought-provoking arguments, and a suspenseful climax. But not, I decided, a keeper. show less
Fantastic stand-alone novel from a master. Oh, Poppy!
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Author Information

211+ Works 19,652 Members
Author F. Paul Wilson was born in Jersey City, New Jersey on May 17, 1946. He has written over forty books and short story collections. He is best known for the Repairman Jack series and the Sims series. He won the Prometheus Award in 1979 for Wheels Within Wheels and in 2004 for Sims. He also won a 1984 Progie Award from the West Coast Review of show more Books for The Tomb, the Hall of Fame Award from the Libertarian Futurist Society in 1990 for Healer and in 1991 for An Enemy of the State, and the 1999 Bram Stoker Award for short fiction for Aftershock. His book The Keep was made into a film in 1983. In 2012 his title Nightworld made The New York Times Bestseller List. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Awards and Honors
Awards
Series
Belongs to Publisher Series
Goldmann (44396)
Common Knowledge
- Canonical title
- Deep as the Marrow
- Original title
- Deep as the Marrow
- Original publication date
- 1997-04
- People/Characters
- John VanDuyne; Katie VanDuyne; Tom Winston; Michael MacLaglen; Paulie DiCastro; Carlos Salinas (show all 12); Allen Gold; Poppy Mulliner; Dan Keane; Gerry Canney; Allen Gold; Lester Appleton
- Important places
- Washington, D.C., USA; Mayflower Hotel, Washington, D.C., USA; Falls Church, Virginia, USA; Atlantic City, New Jersey, USA
- Dedication
- To Meggan and Coates
upon the start of their life together - First words
- ...and then you know what Jimmy did?
- Quotations
- Fear by day and night, fear as deep as the marrow--James Baldwin The Fire Next Time
- Blurbers
- King, Larry
Classifications
Statistics
- Members
- 308
- Popularity
- 103,424
- Reviews
- 3
- Rating
- (3.65)
- Languages
- English, German
- Media
- Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 15
- ASINs
- 7




























































