3 out of 5 stars
On Amazon UK
On Amazon.com
On Goodreads
How I discovered this book: it was submitted to Rosie's Book Review Team, of which I am a member.
Genre: Dark comedy/horror 
Doctor
 Perry is an evil medical man from the pages of an Edwardian horror 
story, complete with black leather doctor's bag and a curious potion he 
asks patients to drink.   The crux of the plot is about what happens 
when you drink said potion; this came as a surprise to me, and the 
build-up to it was well done.
Much
 of the action takes pace in a retirement home, with an abundance of 
characters.  Some are well-drawn and realistic (Elijah, the main man, was particularly
 good), others conforming to perceived stereotypes, which I felt was intentional, as this is
 not a 'serious' horror story.  I changed my mindset about what I was 
reading once I saw that Perry is more a like a dastardly doctor you 
might see walking out of the mists on an old BBC drama, or a Jekyll and Hyde type old film.  Patients drink a 'tonic' from Perry (rather than one 
obtained via a pharmacy) with little questioning about what it 
contains.  Of course this is pure pantomime, in an era when many patients 
look up even prescribed medication on the internet to make sure it is 
safe.
The
 writing is generally good, with wit and understanding of human nature 
(always a plus) but it needs another go-through with a 
copy-editor/proofreader who knows how to punctuate/has more of an eagle 
eye.  There was a fair bit of incorrect punctuation, mostly missing commas or 
commas that should have been semicolons, and many, many run-on sentences/comma splices. 
 The sort of uncorrected punctuation errors present in the book are not 
of the type that would be noticed by everyone, perhaps only by those 
they call 'punctuation Nazis', but unfortunately I am one of these!

Thank you Terry.
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