Prescription For Trouble Books in Order
Part ofRichard L Mabry Books in OrderExplore the Prescription For Trouble series by Richard L Mabry, with the books in order, quick summaries, series background, and where to start.
Last updated: July 2, 2026
As an Amazon Associate, we earn from qualifying purchases (at no extra cost to you).
Publication Order
6 books
Code Blue
by Richard L Mabry
2009
Dr. Cathy Sewell returns to her hometown hoping to heal from a broken relationship, but someone clearly wants her gone. As a bad prescription triggers a malpractice storm, old ties and new enemies make every step risky.
Medical Error
by Richard L Mabry
2010
Anna McIntyre's life starts unraveling when a patient dies in an identity mix-up and forged prescriptions damage her career. With her finances wrecked and fear closing in, she has to find who is living her life before it destroys her.
Diagnosis Death
by Richard L Mabry
2011
After her husband is taken off life support, Dr. Elena Gardner becomes the focus of grief, gossip, and growing suspicion. As threatening calls follow her and more deaths occur, she has to prove she is not the killer everyone fears.
Lethal Remedy
by Richard L Mabry
2011
Sara Miles turns to an experimental antibiotic to save a teenage patient with a deadly resistant infection. When the treatment creates a new crisis, Sara and Dr. Rip Pearson race to uncover hidden data before time runs out.
Heart Failure
by Richard L Mabry
2013
Widowed doctor Carrie Markham thinks she has found love again, until a drive-by shooting reveals her fiancΓ©'s false identity and witness protection past. Trusting him could cost her everything, but turning away may be even more dangerous.
Stress Test
by Richard L Mabry
2013
Surgeon Matt Newman survives a kidnapping, only to wake in intensive care charged with murder. With his life, freedom, and career collapsing at once, he has to find the truth before the people who grabbed him come back.
Series background & context
Prescription For Trouble is where Richard L Mabry first lays out the kind of story he would become known for. These are medical suspense novels, but they are also stories about careers under strain, private grief, damaged trust, and the way danger can slip from the hospital into everyday life. The four books, Code Blue, Medical Error, Diagnosis Death, and Lethal Remedy, are connected more by tone and approach than by one giant continuing plot, which makes the series easy to read in order or one book at a time.
Each novel centers on a physician who should be dealing with patients, charts, and ordinary professional pressure, only to find that something much worse is unfolding. In Code Blue, Cathy Sewell comes back to her hometown hoping for a fresh start and instead walks into hostility, medical trouble, and real threats. Medical Error follows Anna McIntyre as identity theft and forged prescriptions begin wrecking both her career and her personal life. In Diagnosis Death, Elena Gardner is crushed by grief and then forced to live under suspicion as strange deaths and threatening calls gather around her. Lethal Remedy shifts into a tighter race against time, with Sara Miles trying to save a dying patient while uncovering what has gone wrong with an experimental drug.
What makes the setting matter is that Mabry knows how hospitals and clinics really feel. These books spend time with staff politics, medical privileges, patient care, prescriptions, specialists, and the quiet panic that spreads when something goes wrong. The details help the stakes feel real, but they do not bury the story in jargon. Even if you are not interested in medicine for its own sake, the professional world gives the suspense weight.
No one in these books gets to stay comfortable for long.
Another thread running through the series is reputation. Mabry's doctors are not just trying to stay alive. They are also trying to protect their names, their licenses, their relationships, and sometimes their faith. Rumors, lawsuits, police questions, and bad decisions can do almost as much damage as the obvious villains. The books also make room for romance and Christian belief, but usually in a quiet way. Faith is part of how the characters cope, not a speech dropped in from outside the story.
If you are wondering what kind of series this is, think fast, readable, and clean, with a strong medical backbone and a lot of personal pressure. The protagonists are competent adults, often women physicians, who are dealing with fear from several directions at once. That blend gives the series a nice balance. You get murder, sabotage, and ticking-clock tension, but you also get people trying to rebuild their lives.
Reading the books in publication order works best, because you can watch Mabry settle into his voice and sharpen the mix of suspense, medicine, and emotional fallout. But the biggest appeal stays the same from start to finish: ordinary medical lives, suddenly pushed into extraordinary trouble.
Edited by
Software engineer whose passion for tracking book recommendations from podcasts inspired the creation of MRB.
Lead investor at 3one4 Capital whose startup expertise and love for books helped shaped MRB and its growth.























Comments
Did we miss something? Have feedback?
Help us improve this page by sharing your thoughts