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Michael Stephen Palmer, M.D. (October 9, 1942 – October 30, 2013), was an American physician and author. His novels are often referred to as medical thrillers.[1] Some of his novels have made the New York Times Best Seller List and have been translated into 35 languages. One, Extreme Measures (1991), was adopted into a 1996 film of the same name starring Hugh Grant, Sarah Jessica Parker, and Gene Hackman.
Michael Stephen Palmer was born in Springfield, Massachusetts on October 9, 1942 to Milton and May Palmer. He grew up with two younger sisters, Donna and Susan.[2] Palmer graduated from Wesleyan University in 1964 with a pre-med major, and with "sort of a Russian minor". He then went to Case Western Reserve University for medical school. Palmer trained in internal medicine at Boston City Hospital and Massachusetts General Hospital.
Palmer once claimed he never wanted to be a writer. He did not think he had much "flair" for it, even though he read in his spare time. In 1978, he read Robin Cook's medical thriller Coma (1977). Palmer thought if Cook, also a Wesleyan graduate, could write a novel, then he could too. When not writing, he worked part-time at Massachusetts Medical Society.[3] Before he began work on his first published novel, The Sisterhood, about euthanasia, Palmer was practicing treatment of drug addiction.
Side Effects (1985), his second published work, was about the testing of unapproved drugs on a patient in Nazi Germany, but his most famous novel proved to be Extreme Measures (1991), in which a promising young doctor is threatened by a hospital elite after discovering the body's criminal acts. A selection of his other books include: Natural Causes (1994), about an holistic doctor who prescribes medicine that actually kills patients; Miracle Cure (1998), about a drug for heart disease that actually is very dangerous because of its side effects; and Extreme Measures (1991), on which the eponymous 1996 thriller film starring Hugh Grant, Sarah Jessica Parker, and Gene Hackman is based.
On October 29, 2013, he unexpectedly suffered a heart attack and stroke, dying the next day in New York City. In addition to both of his sisters and his three sons Matthew, Daniel, and Luke, Palmer's survivors include four grandchildren, his girlfriend Robin Broady, and his ex-wives Judith Grass and Noelle Shaughnessy.[4] In Palmer's memory, a tribute trail was named in his honor at Red Run Stream Valley Trail in November 2013.[5]
Long Island, Queens, Brooklyn, Philadelphia, Staten Island
Williams College, Amherst College, Connecticut College, Smith College, Bowdoin College
Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine, Carnegie Mellon University, Nobel Prize in Physics, Cleveland Institute of Music, Nobel Prize
Connecticut River, Massachusetts, Worcester, Massachusetts, Boston, Metro Center, Springfield, Massachusetts
Bbc, Assisted suicide, Capital punishment, Netherlands, Oregon
Nicholas Sparks, Mary Higgins Clark, Michael Connelly, James Patterson, Lee Child
Michael Apted, Tony Gilroy, Rotten Tomatoes, Hugh Grant, David Morse (actor)
Uranium, Dvd, Roger Corman, John Savage (actor), Cliff De Young
Direct-to-video, Dvd, Uranium, Mesozoic, Los Angeles