Why am I passionate about this?

I’ve loved biology and medicine since the fifth grade when I learned about white blood cells and their function. For thirty years, I worked in intensive care where adrenaline levels run high. A good thriller does the same. It keeps my heart beating fast and my attention completely focused. Yet also, I’m a mother of three boys, and I’ve always worked in pediatrics and neonatology. I love kids, and I love being a mom. The heart in these books makes them more than simply an adrenaline fix on the page. I find the blend of heart with page-turning intrigue makes for a perfect read. 


I wrote...

The Very Best of Care

By Julie Hatch ,

Book cover of The Very Best of Care

What is my book about?

A young mother stumbles on a disturbing secret: the health system is so broken that the lives of newborns and…

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The books I picked & why

Book cover of Saving Meghan

Julie Hatch Why I love this book

This is one of my top favorite contemporary medical suspense novels because of the strong family relationships, especially the parent-child bond, which automatically makes me care about the story.

I was drawn into this book right away because of the relatability of the characters and the family dynamics that evolve between mother, father, daughter (Meghan), and the challenge facing them all–Meghan’s medical illness. As a pediatric practitioner, I understood the medical jargon, including the diagnosis of Munchausen by proxy, a fascinating psychological diagnosis. The author does a good job of explaining what a non-medical reader may not understand.

This book has an unreliable narrator–a technique I totally love. The unreliable narrator and the unexpected twists and turns, so well executed, I think, make this such an excellent novel.

By D. J. Palmer ,

Why should I read it?

1 author picked Saving Meghan as one of their favorite books, and they share why you should read it.

What is this book about?

Saving Meghan is a riveting new thriller full of secrets and lies from author D.J. Palmer.

Can you love someone to death?

Some would say Becky Gerard is a devoted mother and would do anything for her only child. Others, including her husband Carl, claim she's obsessed and can't stop the vicious circle of finding a cure at her daughter's expense.

Fifteen-year-old Meghan has been in and out of hospitals with a plague of unexplained illnesses. But when the ailments take a sharp turn, clashing medical opinions begin to raise questions about the puzzling nature of Meghan's illness. Doctors suspect…


Book cover of The Midwife Murders

Julie Hatch Why I love this book

I tore through this book in a day and a half because it was such a page-turner. It was right up my alley as a neonatal nurse practitioner with newborns as the central theme. Add kidnapping and a black market to the mix, and it’s a great medical thriller.

The plot was strong, with some great twists at the end. The male authors tried and mostly succeeded in adding some heart to the story by adding scenes of the protagonist returning to her childhood home in West Virginia to see her ailing mother, father, and drug-addicted brother. It’s heavy in plot and a little light in character development, but for James Patterson, that’s what he does best.

By James Patterson , Richard DiLallo ,

Why should I read it?

1 author picked The Midwife Murders as one of their favorite books, and they share why you should read it.

What is this book about?

In this psychological thriller, a missing patient raises concerns in a New York hospital, but as others start disappearing every dark possibility becomes more and more likely.

To Senior Midwife Lucy Ryuan, pregnancy is not an unusual condition—it's her life's work. But when two kidnappings and a vicious stabbing happen on her watch in a university hospital in Manhattan, her focus abruptly changes. Something has to be done, and Lucy is fearless enough to try.

Rumors begin to swirl, blaming everyone from the Russian Mafia to an underground adoption network. Lucy teams up with a skeptical NYPD detective to solve…


Book cover of The Origami Deception

The Origami Deception by David Wickenden,

Two small-time journalists take on an international cartel who try a hostile takeover of a Canadian mining company.

Lucas, a veteran journalist, sees a big story brewing within a strike at a local mining company when explosions rip through the plant, but he gets bumped by Jamie, a junior reporter.…

Book cover of Coma

Julie Hatch Why I love this book

In my opinion, Robin Cook is the father of the medical thriller, and this is his best.

It’s an old but classic medical thriller, one that I’ve reread numerous times. It’s one that I hold up against all medical thrillers as the gold standard. Good character development, solid plot, and a great twisty ending. It’s dated, but still a solid medical thriller.

By Robin Cook ,

Why should I read it?

5 authors picked Coma as one of their favorite books, and they share why you should read it.

What is this book about?

The blockbuster bestseller that kickstarted a new genre--the medical thriller--is now available in trade paperback for the first time.
They called it "minor surgery," but Nancy Greenly, Sean Berman and a dozen others--all admitted to Boston Memorial Hospital for routine procedures--were victims of the same inexplicable, hideous tragedy on the operating table. They never woke up.
Susan Wheeler is a third-year medical student working as a trainee at Boston Memorial Hospital. Two patients during her residency mysteriously go into comas immediately after their operations due to complications from anesthesia. Susan begins to investigate the causes behind both of these alarming…


Book cover of Under the Knife

Julie Hatch Why I love this book

An excellent, well-known medical thriller author, Tess Gerritsen, gets it right every time.

This book has the perfect proportion of medicine, suspense, characters, and heart. I love the protagonist, a strong, independent woman who needs nobody, but is vulnerable and has a huge heart. She does the unthinkable by accidentally killing her patient. Gravely affected by her fatal mistake, she nearly quits medicine.

But I love this character and cheer her on! She rises up and fights back. In the end, finding love was the icing on the cake. She is the perfect heroine in a fast-paced thriller, with plenty of human emotion.

By Tess Gerritsen ,

Why should I read it?

1 author picked Under the Knife as one of their favorite books, and they share why you should read it.

What is this book about?

For David Ransom, it begins as an open-and-shut case. Malpractice. As attorney for a grieving family, he's determined to hang a negligent doctor. Then Dr. Kate Chesne storms into his office, dating him to seek out the truth -- that she's being framed.

First, it was Kate's career that was in jeopardy. Then, when another body is discovered, David begins to believe her. Suddenly, it's much more. Somewhere in the Honolulu hospital, a killer walks freely among patients and staff. And now David finds himself asking the same questions Kate is desperate to have answered. Who is next? And why?


Book cover of Broken Code

Broken Code by Monica Chase,

If the future can be edited—who decides what gets erased? Broken Code is a high-stakes biotech conspiracy thriller where power isn’t seized—it’s engineered.

Harper “Brass” Brasfield, a Memphis attorney barely holding her life together, stumbles onto a case that exposes a disturbing experiment: behavior-altering gene edits designed to control who…

Book cover of Only One Cure

Julie Hatch Why I love this book

I chose this book because it’s another one written for a female audience, in a big way–the author is female, the protagonist is female, the president of the United States in the story is a woman, and the greatest little detail I fully appreciate is when a man serves the coffee to a room full of important people, including the protagonist.

Another book with a great balance of medicine, intrigue, life and death urgency, and best of all, characters I could appreciate and root for. 

By Jenifer Ruff ,

Why should I read it?

1 author picked Only One Cure as one of their favorite books, and they share why you should read it.

What is this book about?

The President's only child is dying. Terrorists claim to have the cure.
When a private plane whisks CDC epidemiologist Madeline Hamilton to Washington D.C. for an urgent medical symposium, she knows something significant is underway—but she doesn't expect to face the most disturbing medical mystery of her career. A debilitating neurological toxin has stricken the children of several political families, and one of them is the son of U.S. President Anna Moreland.

With the lives of children on the line, Madeline assembles a team of medical experts. The investigation takes a horrifying turn when she starts receiving communications from the…


Explore my book 😀

The Very Best of Care

By Julie Hatch ,

Book cover of The Very Best of Care

What is my book about?

A young mother stumbles on a disturbing secret: the health system is so broken that the lives of newborns and the unborn are no longer safe. Sophie Young is forced to deliver her tiny two-pound baby boy, three and a half months early, barely old enough to survive. Caught in the labyrinth of hospital secrecy, Sophie meets the dark side of modern medicine: corruption, exploitation, and profiteering.

Sophie fights the underdog fight against the corrupt medical system. Her final message is simple: it’s a law of nature–never come between a mother and her child.

Book cover of Saving Meghan
Book cover of The Midwife Murders
Book cover of Coma

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