Writer, M.D The best contemporary fiction and nonfiction by doctors

Book - 2012

"For centuries, doctors have turned to the written word, giving voice to their unique perspectives through literature. Writer, M.D. celebrates this tradition with a wide-ranging selection of writings--both fiction and nonfiction--by some of today's most beloved physician-writers. These stories explore a range of emotions deeply felt by doctors--an acute awareness of our mortality, of the interplay between medicine and humanity, of the weight of responsibility carried by the profession. They also bring into sharp focus the point of view of the patient, illuminating the experience of grief, trauma, illness, and aging that doctors witness through their work. From Abraham Verghese on the lost art of the physical exam to Pauline Chen o...n the strangely intense relationship between a med student and her first cadaver; from Atul Gawande on practicing to be a doctor to Ethan Canin on love and growing old--Writer, M.D. provides a one-of-a-kind peek into the minds of those who deal with enormous existential issues and traumatic situations on a daily basis, showing us what really makes doctors tick"--

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Subjects
Published
New York : Vintage 2012.
Language
English
Other Authors
Leah Kaminsky, 1959- (-)
Physical Description
xvii, 254 p. ; 21 cm
ISBN
9780307946867
  • Foreword / Jerome Groopman
  • Introduction / Leah Kaminsky
  • Bedside Manners / Abraham Verghese
  • Index Case / Perri Klass
  • Resurrectionist / Pauline W. Chen
  • Intensive Care / Danielle Ofri
  • Falling Down / Sandeep Jauhar
  • Beauty / Gabriel Weston
  • Do Not Go Gentle / Irvin Yalom
  • The Lost Mariner / Oliver Sacks
  • The Learning Curve / Atul Gawande
  • The Infernal Chorus / Robert Jay Lifton
  • We Are Nighttime Travelers / Ethan Canin
  • Dog 1, Dog 2 / Nick Earls
  • The Duty to Die Cheaply / Peter Goldsworthy
  • Finding Joshua / Jacinta Halloran
  • Tahirih / Leah Kaminsky
  • Communion / John Murray.
Review by Booklist Review

*Starred Review* Lucky the reader who picks up poet and physician Kaminsky's excellent anthology, chockablock with works by some of the finest medical writers around Atul Gawande, Sandeep Jauhar, Oliver Sachs, and Danielle Ofri, to name a few. Each little gem begs for more of the same more wisdom, more compassionate doctorly counsel, more of the candid feelings most medicos keep veiled behind the face of professionalism. A selection of fiction and nonfiction, weighted more heavily toward the latter, the stories answer questions about the personal thoughts of those who heal by knife and those who can relate all too uncomfortably to a psychiatric patient's secrets. How does a physician's training affect one's attitude toward death? What does it feel like as an intern to have someone's survival hang on the fragile thread of your freshly minted medical diploma? Further, the fictional stories are no less poignant for their authors' scientific dispassion, maybe more so. In toto, Kaminsky's superior anthology is like an impressive menu or a fine wine list; it leaves readers wanting to sample more by the authors of these satisfying offerings.--Chavez, Donna Copyright 2010 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Library Journal Review

Physician and poet Kaminsky (Stitching Things Together) presents this new compilation of fiction and nonfiction from such literary and scientific icons as Abraham Verghese and Oliver Sacks, driving home the point that while our health-care system might be broken, our doctors are not. As patients, we can forget that doctors are fellow human beings, not automatons conducting surgeries. This compilation reminds us of this fact, revealing doctors' encounters with their own mortality and that of their patients. Nonfiction essays by Pauline Chen and Atul Gawande, among others, describe the ordeals of medical school, the exhausting stretch of internships and residencies, and the responsibilities, gratification, and adrenaline rush of working in pediatrics, the ICU, and the operating theater. Short fiction offerings by Ethan Canin, Jacinta Halloran, and others take us outside of the realm of medicine, reflecting on such themes as aging, canine medical test subjects, losing a child, acceptance, and forgiveness. VERDICT The physician writers who contributed to this collection of essays and stories provide a counterpoint to the often stark and disheartening realities of seeking medical treatment in America today. Recommended.-Rachael Dreyer, Univ. of Wyoming, Laramie (c) Copyright 2011. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Foreword by Jerome Groopman   A physician works at the border between science and the soul. Schooled in physiology and pharmacology, the molecular workings of genes and proteins, the biochemistry of health and disease, a doctor brings to care a diverse body of expert knowledge. That knowledge is rapidly expanding with the use of sophisticated technologies such as genomics that map mutations in our DNA, and MRI scans that reveal millimetre abnormalities in our inner organs. This wealth of information has changed the nature of diagnosis and treatment, bringing many maladies under the bright light of science, illuminating their genesis, and providing a rational basis for their remedy. But what has not changed over the millennia is the human soul. The role of the physician as healer has not been fundamentally altered by his burgeoning knowledge. Greater knowledge does not necessarily translate into greater wisdom. Wisdom requires melding information with judgement and values. The wise doctor probes not only the organs of his patient but also his feelings and emotions, his fears and his hopes, his regrets and his goals. And to accomplish that most important task of applying wisdom, the physician also needs to take his own emotional temperature, to realise how his own beliefs and biases may be brought to bear in his efforts to secure a better future for his patient. This remarkable collection melds science and the soul, logic with feeling, knowledge with wisdom. The voices that the reader hears are among the most prominent in the constellation of physician--writers. What makes these writers so compelling is not only the fluidity of their prose and the intensity of their focus, not only their literary and narrative skills, but also their remarkable degree of self-awareness. A physician is trained in medical school and residency to hide his feelings and filter his thoughts. This training is required in order to effectively deliver care in an environment that is often chaotic and unnerving. The doctor needs to present himself to the patient as a safe harbour of stability in the midst of the tempest of illness. But when that doctor has moved from the clinic to the page, the mask drops, and we see the turmoil and tribulations in his heart and mind. The humanity of both patient and physician is what makes the stories that follow so rich and so fulfilling. Introduction by Leah Kaminsky   When I first became a medical student, many years ago, I developed a condition I call Tunnel Vision of the Soul. It is a crippling ailment in which you see only things that are straight in front of you. You focus on the sickness, and don't see the sick person. Your peripheral vision is blurred, so that you don't notice your surroundings, with all their inherent colours, nuances, and possibilities, unless you deliberately turn your head to look. The onset can be insidious, the symptoms barely perceptible at first. Spending lunchtimes in the anatomy museum, surrounded by dissections under glass, it never occurred to me that what lay exposed was the pelvis of someone's mother, or the foot of somebody's brother. I munched on chicken sandwiches, busily memorising mnemonics: Swiftly Lower Tilley's Pants To Try Coitus There , for the bones of the wrist; Grandpa Shagging Grandma's Love Child, for the top layers of the skin. After six years as a medical student, practising rectal examinations on old men who had become paralysed following a stroke, performing bone-marrow biopsies on dying little old ladies, and shoving needles into the spines of crying babies, I emerged almost totally desensitised to human pain and suffering. My fortnightly salary cheques were based on the fact that other people fell ill, or died. And as a cocky young intern, proudly wearing my long, white coat while strolling through the wards of a large teaching hospital, I felt impermeable. The cure for my tunnel vision came gradually. I started reading literature, which coaxed me to return to writing--something I hadn't done since high school. With my trembling pen, I began to heal my own wounds and try to make some sort of sense of what I had experienced as a young doctor and as a human being. Since that time, my medicine has always fed and informed my writing. But, more importantly, my writing has hopefully made me a better doctor. Becoming a writer has opened my eyes, so that I am able to see my patients as human beings, each one with their very own story to tell. And nowadays, I hope that I am able to listen to their hearts--with both my stethoscope and my pen poised. Writer, M.D. is a collection of stories--fiction and non-fiction--that aims to look behind the doctor's mask. What goes on inside the mind of the human being who deals with enormous existential issues and traumatic situations on a daily basis? It is through writing that many doctors have plumbed the depths and richness of their experience and, in turn, used this to explore their patients' inner lives. These stories canvass emotional experiences acutely felt by doctors--an awareness of our mortality, of how humanity interplays with medicine, of the weight of responsibility carried by the profession. The fiction pieces, in particular, often use the point of view of the patient to examine a range of issues, including grief, trauma, illness, and ageing. The public is hungry to see behind the veneer of the medical professional, as evidenced by the burgeoning number of TV shows such as ER and Grey's Anatomy . This book delves beyond sensationalism, taking a critical look at doctors' close observations of, and reflections upon, their working lives. Physician-writers have a long tradition. Apollo managed to combine a dual career as the Greek god of both poetry and medicine. Copernicus, Maimonides, Bulgakov, and Chekhov were all physicians who purloined their patients' narratives. In this anthology, I hope the reader will be afforded a glimpse of the world through the eyes of some of our best contemporary doctor--writers. Every patient has a story to tell, if only you take the time to listen. From the Trade Paperback edition. Excerpted from Writer, M. D.: The Best Contemporary Fiction and Nonfiction by Doctor by Leah Kaminsky All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.