About The Book
About The Book
The Deadly Plastic Surgeon
‘The Deadly Plastic Surgeon’ opens with Carlito Vega orchestrating the kidnapping of the entire Miami Dolphins football team to identify who’s having an affair with his mistress. The star quarterback suffers horrific public mutilation in a Cuban airplane hangar, establishing Vega’s sadistic cruelty. He uses a solid gold golf club to torture people and employs technology like a lie detector phone to control his empire.
Meanwhile, Dr. Kai Singer, a Tier One Navy SEAL operator turned Beverly Hills plastic surgeon, unknowingly performs facial reconstruction on Vega, attempting to hide his identity. When Vega realizes the surgeon knows his new face, he sends assassins led by Rico Tavarez to eliminate Kai and his family.
Kai and his father, Dr. Tony Singer, a fellow Navy SEAL doctor and world-class microsurgeon, revert to their elite military training. With help from General Norman Hatch and Sergeant Major Frank Colt, they access advanced military intelligence and force multipliers from Los Alamos National Laboratory.
The story tracks their battle across multiple locations as they systematically eliminate Vega’s guards and breach his compound. In a tense confrontation, Kai injects Vega with scopolamine rather than killing him directly. Tragedy strikes when Chinese assassin Sycamore uses poison-tipped nails to kill Tony instantly, devastating Kai and setting up his quest to investigate the poison source.
Why Read It?
The Deadly Plastic Surgeon
‘The Deadly Plastic Surgeon’ delivers for readers craving action-packed military thrillers with authentic tactical details. Bigott writes from understanding, creating combat scenarios that feel grounded rather than Hollywood exaggerated. The SEAL training background of Kai and Tony drives realistic responses to impossible situations rather than superhero solutions.
The book provides fast-paced entertainment through globe-trotting locations, high-tech surveillance, and brutal cartel violence contrasted against disciplined military operations. Readers get both sides: the sadistic torture Vega inflicts and the calculated precision of Marine Raiders eliminating targets methodically.
Beyond action sequences, the memoir explores family bonds under extreme pressure. The relationship between Kai and Tony drives emotional stakes higher than simple survival. Their willingness to sacrifice everything for each other adds depth to standard thriller plotting. Tony’s death hits harder because the book invested in their connection early.
The cartel corruption depicted feels ripped from headlines. Vega’s connections to law enforcement, international arms dealers, and rival cartels create a web showing how deeply organized crime penetrates legitimate systems. Bigott balances entertainment with authentic feeling stakes, creating a thriller that moves quickly while maintaining substance beneath the surface-level action.