The Blood Doctor by Barbara Vine, , 0141803770 Search discount cheap book, Compare Book prices, Find Lowest Price
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The Blood Doctor, cheap new, used books  The Blood Doctor
Author: Barbara Vine  
ISBN: 0141803770   /   Audio Cassette
Publisher: Penguin Audiobooks   /   2002-06-06
List Price: £13.00
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Editorial Reviews:
In The Blood Doctor, as in others of the books she has written as Barbara Vine, Ruth Rendell stretches the boundaries of what we mean when we describe a book as a psychological thriller. Nanther is a biographer who is in crisis in most areas of his life--he has run out of inspiration, his other "job" as a hereditary peer is in the course of being voted out of existence and his relationship with his second wife is threatened by the difficulties she is experiencing in bringing a child to term. He throws himself into a study of his great-grandfather Henry--a doctor ennobled by Queen Victoria for his work on the haemophilia which dogged her descendants--and finds something not quite right. Henry was not just a repressed Victorian--there was something about his ruthless jilting of mistresses and fiancées which implies something a lot more peculiar and Nanther sets out to work out what it was. This novel is acute on the intellectual pleasures of historical research including the guilty prurience of working out dead people's secrets; it is also genuinely insightful in its portrait of Nanther, a man who thinks he is a worse and more useless man than he is, and finds out from Henry what real human evil might be. --Roz Kaveney

Customer Reviews:
Disappointing     
I was very disappointed to work out how the story was going to end, long before the end of the novel. Not one of Barbara Vine's best.
Multiple story lines confidently woven together     
I have only recently started to read the books of Barbara Vine (aka Ruth Rendell) and when I picked The Blood Doctor up I was expecting a psychological thriller. And what a pleasant surprise I got - this book was even better!

The Blood Doctor tells the story of Martin Nanther's attempt to write a biography of his great-great-grandfather, Henry Nanther. We join with Martin in his attempts to unpick Henry's story through direct research and interviews with members of his extended family. Interwoven with Henry's story are other minor themes involving Martin's sadness over the loss of his hereditary seat in the House of Lords, and his and his wife's attempts to have a baby.

The story-telling is wonderfully done, with the different story strands weaving effortlessly together. There are many fascinating and brilliantly drawn minor characters, ranging through the colourful fellow peer, the domineering Aunt, the stroppy and arrogant son, etc.

The pace is slow (this is not a thriller), and the reader continually needs to refer back to the family trees printed at the front of the book to see who is who, but I enjoyed the gradual unravelling of the mystery concealed in Henry's life. If I have a criticism at all it is that Martin Nanther is just too nice; too considerate of his wife's needs, even when they are in conflict with his own, too aware of his own weaknesses and too willing to try to compensate for them - why don't I meet men like him???.
A serious "paper mystery" and historical recreation.     
Queen Victoria, her family, and her genetic contribution to the scourge of hemophilia in ruling families throughout Europe, all figure in this fascinating medical mystery. Dr. Henry Nanther, Physician In-Ordinary to Prince Leopold, Queen Victoria's beloved hemophiliac son, tells through letters, diary entries, and his personal "alternative history" the story of his research into hemophilia and how it is transmitted. Martin Nanther, the 4th Lord Nanther, who inherited his peerage from his great-grandfather Henry, is the desk-bound modern detective in this tale, researching Henry's life for a biography he intends to write about his contributions to history and medicine. The agony of the hemophiliac during the Victorian era, when little help could be offered the sufferer, is finely drawn.

Though most of the action takes place "off stage," Vine's characterizations are fully drawn and Martin's quest is intriguing,making the reader feel like part of the action, even the action of 100 years ago. Students of genealogy will be fascinated as Martin follows a genealogical paper trail through many generations of Nanthers and the Hendersons, his forbears on his mother's side of the family.

The serious, intellectual tone and Vine's careful attention to detail, particularly as it reveals the psychology and motivation of her characters, elevate this a serious novel and give the reader much to contemplate. Ironically, Henry's personality is so carefully delineated that many readers may figure out, on the basis of Vine's information, Henry's secret history, well before the conclusion.

With its insights into the Victorian period, the clear discussions of genetics, the contemporary insights into British reforms of the House of Lords, the personal and medical mysteries at the heart of the story, and the urgency of Henry's and Martin's quests, Vine's novel is an unusual and fascinating entertainment. Mary Whipple

The Blood Doctor     
Absolutely abysmal -more effort needed quite frankly.

My partner and I picked this up whilst travelling. We'd been through many books whilst on the road but by the end of this both of us were left wanting. It takes what could be quite a fascinating concept (one of your ancestors commits a terrible genetic experiment on your blood line) and draws it out longer than War of the Roses.

The story itself skips back and forth between the reign of Queen Victoria and the modern day. It is redeemed by the modern day plot in which the main character's wife keeps having miscarriages (again, something to do with genetics) and it all gets a bit hairy. But you find yourself happily skipping over the main plot to find out what happens in the sub plot because it's the only interesting thing going on.

Good concept, bad execution is all I can offer. But you learn a lot about the House of Lords.

The Magnificent BLOOD Obsession     
All indications, when looking at the cover of this book, lead the reader to believe that this will be one of Vine's psychological thrillers. I figured that some surgeon, obsessed with blood, would be traveling the British Isles with scalpel in hand looking for his next victim. But the reader of this book must look a little closer at the two words following the title, THE BLOOD DOCTOR. Those two words are "A Novel." This changes everything.

More on the line of Vine's A Chimney Sweeper's Boy, this book is not a thriller but does test the psyche of its main character, Martin Nanther, as he takes on the task of writing his great grandfather's biography. I always wonder what compels an author to write under a pseudonym as Ruth Rendall does when she writes as Barbara Vine. A Chimney Sweeper's Boy and The Blood Doctor, both written under the Vine name, are perfect examples of why an author would do this. They are both such a departure from the books written under Rendall's real name. While both are dark and mysterious at times, Vines's books take on a different edge as they weave in and out of the lives of her characters and almost no one escapes scrutiny. This book is such an amazing achievement....so amazing that I couldn't stop thinking about it every time I was forced to put it down to get on with my daily life.

As I mentioned already, Martin Nanther, frustrated author, decides to write about his great grandfather's life. The research involved is so very interesting because Henry Nanther lived in the nineteenth century, was a physician to Queen Victoria and also specialized in hemophilia (a disease very familiar to Queen Victoria and her royal family)....thus the title of the book. When Martin discovers hemophilia in some of Henry's own descendants, the plot thickens and Martin is determined to find its roots as he interviews every distant cousin he can find. This research is also aided by letters written by Henry's children as well as Henry's own journal entries.

At the same time he is doing all this research, Martin is waging war with his own inner demons as his wife of four years is obsessed with having a child...a child that Martin is not looking forward to having. As she continually miscarries, Martin is at a loss to show the empathy he should be feeling but just can't muster. As if this isn't enough stress for one individual, Martin is about to be stripped of his hereditary peerage, and the income that goes along with it, as the House of Lords is being reformed. This is a peerage he inherited from none other than his great grandfather Henry. I found this part of the book so very fascinating as I know so little about the workings of the English government.

So between his great grandfather's obsession with blood, Queen Victoria's hemophiliac royal family, the work involved in researching a biography, a wife who miscarries for no apparent reason and learning about the inner workings of the House of Lords, this book was more than I ever anticipated. You know that feeling when you're not expecting a "great" book and you get one. It's not Rendall and her psychological thrillers....it's Vine at her best writing "A Novel."

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