'Sicko' is this wild ride where a group of teens discovers their town’s hospital is hiding something sinister—patients who check in for minor issues never quite recover, instead becoming eerily compliant. The main character, a sarcastic 17-year-old named Mara, digs deeper after her ex-boyfriend vanishes post-appointment. Turns out, the doctors are testing a mind-control serum disguised as vaccines, and Mara’s immune to it. The plot twists like a thriller, with her faking illness to infiltrate the hospital’s secret ward. The climax had me gasping; Mara broadcasts the truth live, but the serum’s already in the water supply. Chilling stuff!
The novel 'Sicko' dives into a gritty, near-future world where corporate greed has turned healthcare into a literal battlefield. The protagonist, a disillusioned med-tech named Elias, stumbles upon a conspiracy: a pharmaceutical giant is intentionally suppressing a cure for a widespread neurological disease to keep profits flowing. The story kicks off when Elias’s younger sister becomes one of the victims, pushing him to team up with underground activists and rogue scientists. What follows is a tense, high-stakes cat-and-mouse game through neon-lit slums and sterile corporate labs, blending cyberpunk aesthetics with raw emotional stakes.
What really hooked me was how personal the conflict felt—it wasn’t just about saving the world, but about Elias confronting his own complicity in the system. The author doesn’t shy away from brutal moments, like when Elias has to choose between leaking the cure or saving a friend’s life. The ending’s deliberately ambiguous, leaving you wondering whether the cure’s dissemination actually changed anything or just became another commodity. It’s the kind of book that lingers, making you side-eye your own medicine cabinet afterward.
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The Doctor’s Voluptuous Patient
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When a brutal car crash leaves curvy nurse Lila Monroe fighting for her life, the last person she expects to become her savior is the hospital’s most brilliant — and dangerously handsome — trauma surgeon, Dr. Ethan Black.
From the moment Ethan lays eyes on Lila’s full, voluptuous body, he’s obsessed. Her soft caramel skin, heavy breasts, wide hips, and thick thighs awaken something primal in him. Rules be damned. He will protect her. He will claim her. And he will worship every inch of her curves until she finally believes she’s utterly irresistible.
But their forbidden passion ignites more than desire. A deadly hit-and-run turns into targeted threats, and someone wants Lila silenced forever. As secrets from Ethan’s powerful family surface, the hunter becomes the hunted.
In a world of hospital corruption, jealousy, and dark danger, can Ethan’s intense love and dominant touch save the woman who has completely ruined him for anyone else?
A scorching forbidden romance packed with steamy body worship, heart-pounding suspense, and raw passion.
Sold off into marriage to save her mother, Liora thought life would eventually be kind to her, but life threw a dagger at her in the hands of the man she had grown to love. Five years later, Liora Adams returns to New York, no longer the broken girl she once was but a famous doctor, determined to make everyone pay. Nothing prepared her when Travis Ashford looked her in the eyes and said, ‘I need a fix, doctor.’ ‘Mr. Ashford, you’ve got the money; why not get one? ” Liora asked. ‘Only you can fix me, Liora," Travis answered. Liora’s lip curved in amusement as she answered, ‘Oh, Mr. Ashford, fixing exes is not a part of my specialty.’
In my last life, the Fosters acknowledged me as their real son.
But my own sister framed me for causing their adopted son's relapse.
My biological parents believed her and threw me out. Not long after, I died sick and alone on the street.
When I opened my eyes again, I had returned to the day the Fosters came to take me home.
Gracie Foster stood in front of our parents, pointed at me, and said, "Mom, Dad, he's not my brother!"
They looked at me in disappointment, then turned and left.
I stood there without taking out the locket that could prove who I was, then quietly walked back into the orphanage.
Twenty years later, I became one of the country's leading cardiologist.
The woman sitting across from me handed over a medical file, her voice trembling.
"Doctor, please. Save my brother."
When I saw the name, I stopped. My gaze shifted to her worn, haggard face.
I stared at her for a long time before finally saying, "I won't take this patient."
Ryan, a stripper, had spent years dreaming of revenge. The night his mother was gunned down, he swore he’d make Ricardo Covallo… a ruthless mafia boss responsible, pay in blood. When the chance came to heal Ricardo of the impotence Ryan had secretly caused, he disguised himself as a doctor and took it without hesitation. One injection, one quiet death, and justice would finally be his.
But Ricardo Covallo is nothing like Ryan expected. Dangerous, yes. But also magnetic, intoxicating, and far too perceptive. A single heated night between them throws Ryan’s plan into chaos. Ricardo, drawn to something he can't quite name, refuses to let Ryan go.
Trapped in a deadly game of deception and desire, Ryan finds himself torn. The man he came to kill now holds him in a cage lined with silk sheets and whispered promises. And the worst part? Ryan isn't sure he wants to escape.
Because maybe revenge isn’t the only thing worth dying for.
The new intern in the unit had to be chronically incompetent.
He handled my mother's post-surgery medication and somehow mixed up the drug. He gave her a potent blood thinner. That night, she died from a hemorrhage after her operation.
Before I could even accuse him, the intern had his puppy-dog eyes ready. "I'm sorry, Dr. Benford, but I thought that was the drug you wanted me to mix. Who was I to question my superior's order?"
Then the hospital director, who was also my wife, chimed in, "Your mom is the idiot for taking her meds without checking. She brought this on herself."
I was so enraged that I had a heart attack, which meant I had to undergo surgery in the same hospital.
The intern insisted on redeeming himself and assisted Victoria during the operation.
He could not even thread a needle because his hands kept trembling. In the middle of the procedure, this medical fraud removed his mask and wet the end of the surgical thread to force it through.
I died in the ICU the next day. The cause was a bacterial infection.
As I neared death, I heard the intern whine through tears, "How could I be so careless? If I weren't so clumsy, Dr. Benford would have lived."
Victoria gently ruffled his hair. "Don't take it to heart, pumpkin. Everyone knows how risky medical procedures can be. You're just starting out, so don't be so hard on yourself."
Because of my wife's efforts, both my mother and I were cremated without any investigation or disciplinary action. You would think that was the end.
It wasn't. The next time I opened my eyes, I was back on the day Hugo Spencer first joined our hospital as an intern.
My CEO boyfriend, Elias Thatcher, had always admired strength, yet he willingly supported a useless intern.
Because he loved me more than life itself, or so I thought.
When a routine physical revealed that the intern, Zoey Redwood, and I shared the same rare blood type. So, he decided to keep her around as my emergency backup. She became a living blood bank, just in case something ever happened to me.
He cooked for her, took her on trips, made handmade gifts, and doted on her at every turn. He said he was doing it for my sake, building up good karma for me.
Then, I got into a car accident.
Rather than letting the intern donate blood to save me, my boyfriend had blood brought in from miles away.
His explanation was gentle, almost tender.
She had a cold. He was afraid something in her blood might be passed on to me.
The very next day, Zoey was diagnosed with kidney failure.
That was when he drugged me and had me wheeled into an operating room, forcing me to donate a kidney.
His voice was warm as he explained, "Zoey is your last resort. She has to stay healthy so she can save your life in a real emergency. I can't use her up over every little illness or injury. Having you donate a kidney to her is for your future, too.
"I don't want you overthinking things. Once the surgery is over, I'll marry you."
What he didn't know was that I already had mid-stage leukemia. His decision to make me donate that kidney had caused my cancer to spread.
I was dying. So, I would never get the chance to marry him.
The novel 'Hospital' is this gripping, almost claustrophobic dive into the underbelly of a medical institution where everything that can go wrong does. It follows Dr. Li, a surgeon who stumbles upon a conspiracy involving patient deaths, forged records, and a shadowy network of administrators covering it all up. The tension escalates when he realizes the hospital’s elite are involved, and his own mentor might be at the center of it. What starts as a medical drama morphs into a thriller—think 'The Godfather' with stethoscopes. The author nails the bureaucratic horror of healthcare systems, making you wonder if you’d ever trust a hospital again.
The subplot with Nurse Zhang, a single mom working night shifts, adds heart. Her arc—struggling to care for her son while witnessing the corruption—grounds the story in real stakes. The ending’s ambiguous; Li exposes some truths but the system swallows others whole. It’s less about tidy resolutions and more about the rot festering behind sterile walls. I finished it in two sittings—couldn’t put it down, though I side-eyed my next doctor’s appointment.
I totally get the urge to dive into 'Sicko'—it's one of those stories that grabs you and doesn't let go! But I’ve gotta be upfront: finding legit free versions of published works can be tricky. Most official platforms like Amazon, BookWalker, or even publisher sites usually require a purchase, especially for newer or popular titles. Scribd sometimes offers free trials where you might snag a copy, and libraries often have digital lending services like OverDrive or Libby, which are totally free with a library card.
If you’re looking for unofficial sites, I’d caution against it—not only do they often violate copyright, but the quality can be spotty (missing pages, weird translations, etc.). Plus, supporting the author helps them keep creating! Maybe check out used bookstores or swap groups if you’re on a budget. I’ve stumbled upon some gems that way, and it feels more rewarding than sketchy uploads. Anyway, hope you find a way to enjoy it without the hassle—it’s worth the hunt!
The first thing that struck me about 'Sick Girl' was how raw and unflinching it was. It's a memoir by Amy Silverstein, detailing her experience living with a heart transplant at just 24 years old. The book doesn't sugarcoat anything—it dives into the physical and emotional toll of chronic illness, the grueling medical procedures, and the way it reshapes relationships. What makes it stand out is Amy's voice: sharp, witty, and brutally honest. She talks about the loneliness of being young and sick, the frustration of being treated like a 'case' rather than a person, and the weird dark humor that gets you through it all.
One of the most gripping parts is how she explores the duality of gratitude and resentment. On one hand, she’s alive because of her donor; on the other, she’s trapped in a body that’s constantly betraying her. The book also digs into the medical system’s flaws—how patients like her are often left to navigate a maze of bureaucracy and indifference. It’s not a tidy, inspirational story, and that’s why it feels so real. I finished it with this weird mix of admiration and heartache, like I’d just witnessed someone’s survival in HD.