The Dop Doctor by Richard Dehan

(10 User reviews)   2846
By John White Posted on Jan 13, 2026
In Category - Aviation
Dehan, Richard, 1863-1932 Dehan, Richard, 1863-1932
English
Okay, I just finished a book that's been sitting on my shelf forever, and I'm kicking myself for waiting so long. It's called 'The Dop Doctor,' and it's not what you'd expect from a title like that. Forget modern thrillers—this is a historical drama set during the Boer War, and it's packed with scandal, secrets, and a main character who's basically walking trouble. The 'dop' doctor is Owen Saxham, a brilliant surgeon whose life gets wrecked by a morphine addiction. We follow his fall from grace in high-society London to his desperate second chance in South Africa. The real hook? A dark, buried secret from his past that threatens to blow up everything, especially when he crosses paths with a woman connected to his old life. It's less about medical drama and more about whether a person can ever truly outrun their mistakes. If you like stories about flawed characters trying to redeem themselves against a huge historical backdrop, you'll get sucked right in.
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Impressions, September, October, December, 1912; February, May, 1913. Popular Edition, July, August, September, 1913; April, 1914; June, 1915; July, September, 1916; September, 1917; February, October, 1918; January, 1920; January, 1922; July, 1924; January, 1927; February, 1930; May, 1932; March, 1934, March 1936 Printed in Great Britain The Windmill Press, Kingswood, Surrey TO ONE ACROSS THE SEA _What have the long years brought me since first, with this pen for pickaxe, I bowed my loins to quarry from the living rock of my world about me, bread and a home where Love should smile beside the hearthplace, and chiefly for Love's dear sake, that men should honour you who, above all on earth, I hold most in honour--a name among the writers of books that live!_ _What have the long years brought me! Well, not the things I hoped. Just bread and clothing, fire, and a little roof-tree; the purchased soil to make a grave, and a space of leisure, before that grave be needed, to write, myself, this book for me and for you. Hope has spread her iridescent Psyche-wings and left me; Ambition long ago shed hers to become a working-ant. Love never came to sit in the chair beside the ingle. An ocean heaves between us, only for nightly dreams and waking thoughts to span. Were those dear eyes to see me as I am to-day, I wonder whether they would know me? For I grow grey, and furrows deepen in the forehead the dear hand will never smooth again. Remember me, then, only as I used to be; my heart is the same always; in it the long, long years have wrought no change._ _But what have the long years brought me? Experience, that savoury salt, left where old tears have dried upon the shores of Time. Knowledge of my fellow men and women, of all sorts and conditions, and the love of them. Patience to bear what may yet have to be borne. Courage to encounter what may yet have to be encountered. Fortitude to meet the end, where faith holds up the Cross. Much have the long years brought me--besides your first smile and your last kiss. For your next, I look past Death, God aiding me, to the Eternal Life beyond...._ SOUTH WALES, _April 22, 1909._ I Upon a day near the end of August, one long, brilliant South African winter, when the old Vierkleur waved over the Transvaal, and what is now the Orange River Colony was the Orange Free State, with the Dutch canton still showing on the staff-head corner of its tribarred flag, two large, heavily-laden waggons rolled over the grass-veld, only now thinking about changing from yellow into green. Many years previously the wheels of the old voortrekkers had passed that way, bringing from Cape Colony, with the household gods, goods and chattels, language and customs of the Dutch, the slips of the pomegranate and peach and orange trees, whose abundant blossoming dressed the orchards of the farms tucked away here and there in the lap of the veld, with bridal white and pink, and hung their girdling pomegranate hedges with stars of ruby red. But days and days, and nights and nights of billowing, spreading, lonely sky-arched veld intervened between each homestead. The flat-topped bills were draped and folded in the opal haze of distance; the sky was perfect turquoise; the rounded kopjes shone like pink topaz, unclothed as yet with the young pale green bush. To the south there was a veld fire leaping and dancing, with swirling columns of white smoke edged with flame. But it was...

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Published in 1910, The Dop Doctor throws you right into the turbulent world of the Second Boer War. But the real battle is inside the main character, Dr. Owen Saxham.

The Story

Owen Saxham starts on top of the world in London—wealthy, respected, and engaged to a society beauty. Then a personal tragedy shatters him, and he turns to morphine (or 'dop') to cope. His addiction costs him everything: his career, his fiancée, and his reputation. Disgraced, he flees to South Africa and reinvents himself as a hard-working army surgeon. Just as he's building a new life and finding a fragile peace, his past catches up with him in the form of Lynette Mildare, a young woman whose fate is strangely tied to his old secret. As war rages around them, Saxham is forced to confront what he did and decide if he's the man he once was, or the broken doctor he became.

Why You Should Read It

This book surprised me. It's not a simple morality tale. Richard Dehan (a pen name for Clotilde Graves) writes Saxham with such raw honesty—you see his weakness, his self-pity, but also his genuine struggle. You're not sure if you should root for him or be furious at him, and that makes him fascinating. The historical setting isn't just wallpaper; the chaos of the war mirrors the chaos in Saxham's soul. What stuck with me was the book's quiet question: Is redemption about fixing your mistakes, or just finding a way to live with them? The female characters, especially Lynette, have more agency than I expected for a novel of this era, which adds great depth.

Final Verdict

Perfect for readers who love character-driven historical fiction with a moral gray area. If you enjoy books where the setting is a character itself and the plot is driven by personal secrets rather than grand battles, this is for you. It's a slower, thoughtful burn than a modern page-turner, but the emotional payoff is huge. Just be ready for some old-fashioned prose and a story that doesn't offer easy answers.



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Dorothy Anderson
4 months ago

After hearing about this author multiple times, it provides a comprehensive overview perfect for everyone. Worth every second.

Donald Martinez
1 year ago

Perfect.

Emily Williams
1 year ago

Based on the summary, I decided to read it and it creates a vivid world that you simply do not want to leave. One of the best books I've read this year.

Ashley Davis
1 year ago

Fast paced, good book.

Oliver Robinson
1 year ago

Based on the summary, I decided to read it and it provides a comprehensive overview perfect for everyone. I would gladly recommend this title.

4.5
4.5 out of 5 (10 User reviews )

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