A thousand naked strangers A paramedics' wild ride to the edge and back

Kevin Hazzard, 1977-

Book - 2016

"A former paramedic's visceral, poignant, and mordantly funny account of a decade spent on Atlanta's mean streets saving lives and connecting with the drama and occasional beauty that lies inside catastrophe. In the aftermath of 9/11 Kevin Hazzard felt that something was missing from his life--his days were too safe, too routine. A failed salesman turned local reporter, he wanted to test himself, see how he might respond to pressure and danger. He signed up for emergency medical training and became, at age twenty-six, a newly minted EMT running calls in the worst sections of Atlanta. His life entered a different realm--one of blood, violence, and amazing grace. Thoroughly intimidated at first and frequently terrified, he expe...rienced on a nightly basis the adrenaline rush of walking into chaos. But in his downtime, Kevin reflected on how people's facades drop away when catastrophe strikes. As his hours on the job piled up, he realized he was beginning to see into the truth of things. There is no pretense five beats into a chest compression, or in an alley next to a crack den, or on a dimly lit highway where cars have collided. Eventually, what had at first seemed impossible happened: Kevin acquired mastery. And in the process he was able to discern the professional differences between his freewheeling peers, what marked each--as he termed them--as "a tourist," "true believer," or "killer." Combining indelible scenes that remind us of life's fragile beauty with laugh-out-loud moments that keep us smiling through the worst, A Thousand Naked Strangers is an absorbing read about one man's journey of self-discovery--a trip that also teaches us about ourselves"--

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Subjects
Published
New York : Scribner 2016.
Language
English
Main Author
Kevin Hazzard, 1977- (author)
Edition
First Scribner hardcover edition
Physical Description
xix, 261 pages ; 22 cm
ISBN
9781501110832
9781501110863
  • Prologue
  • Book 1. A Change of Plans
  • 1. I've Made a Mistake
  • 2. From Zero to Hero
  • 3. Dead Mannequins
  • 4. Living and Breathing Dead People
  • 5. Failure Is an Option
  • 6. A Job at Last
  • 7. First Day
  • Book 2. Fresh Meat
  • 8. Pray for Carnage
  • 9. Killers
  • 10. Tourists
  • 11. The True Believer
  • 12. Death by Broccoli
  • 13. The Seekers
  • 14. Two Dead at Midnight
  • 15. Nailed to the Wall
  • 16. Accidental Veterinarians
  • 17. (Un)Prepared for the Worst
  • 18. Death Before Discharge
  • 19. The Perfect Call
  • 20. Rules to Live By
  • Book 3. Top of the World
  • 21. Do No [Serious) Harm
  • 22. The Private Life of a Public Hospital
  • 23. There's Been a Prison Break
  • 24. Courage Under Mustard
  • 25. Dead Smurfs
  • 26. Hearing Voices
  • 27. Nobody Dies Tonight
  • 28. Another Day in Paradise
  • 29. A Long Answer to a Stupid Question
  • 30. Faith Healers
  • 31. Hubris
  • 32. Dead on Arrival
  • Book 4. The Fall
  • 33. Swirling the Drain
  • 34. Grand Theft Auto
  • 35. Mold Them in Your Image
  • 36. The Stork Rides Again
  • 37. The Summons
  • 38. Full Circle
  • 39. Long Way Gone
  • Epilogue
  • Acknowledgments
Review by Booklist Review

Have you ever wondered what it's like to cruise the streets of a dark and dangerous city, primed to respond to the calls of those in need? No, this isn't the premise of a new superhero comic but, rather, an average day in the life of an emergency medical technician or paramedic. Hazzard presents a thrilling, captivating, and sometimes grisly glimpse into what it takes to be a first responder in the city of Atlanta, Georgia. His prose is quick, witty, and fresh as he describes his 10-year journey from student to paramedic and the varying effects the long hours and high-adrenaline environment have on ambulance workers. Hazzard tells the stories of patients he has saved, patients he has lost, and patients he simply can't forget, seamlessly weaving these vignettes into his overarching personal story. This frank and morbidly funny memoir sheds light onto a sometimes forgotten area of medicine. From delivering babies to responding to cardiac-arrest calls, paramedics have seen the extremes and everything in between. Hazzard takes readers on a wild and unforgettable ride.--Smith, Patricia Copyright 2015 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Readers should fasten their seatbelts for this wild ride with former paramedic Hazzard (Sleeping Dogs) as he navigates Atlanta's seedier side from 2004 to 2013, while tending to a memorable-and gory-array of patients who teeter between life and death. Emergency medical service is "reality distilled and boiled down to its essence," he writes, "and unlike the general public, I'm invited." Hazzard possesses lifesaving skills and an adrenaline-fueled bravado to match. After graduating at the top of his EMT class, he gets a job with an ambulance company staffed by a "misfit circus" of "EMS cast-offs." He rides with partners who are driven, dedicated, and potentially dangerous, and he responds to drug overdoses, a faked suicide, and a man being devoured by a cancer he no longer wants to fight. Hazzard's decision to finally quit a career marked by its pursuit of "life's darker edges" comes with the realization that he's learned numerous lifesaving tricks, but it's not the medicine he cherishes: "I miss the sense of duty, of honor, of humor, the sense of having lost myself somewhere, somehow, in a very strange world." Hazzard's unblinking view of chaos is not for weak stomachs, but it's variously raw, poetic, and profoundly hopeful. Agent: Alice Martell, Martell Agency. (Jan.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A former EMT details his action-packed tenure in the field. Journalist Hazzard's (Sleeping Dogs, 2002) near decade spent as an Atlanta-area paramedic serves as prime fodder for episodes illuminating the stressful and often perilous life of an emergency medical professional. The author's interest in the vocation surfaced in his mid-20s after a career as a reporter in post-9/11 America didn't deliver the "pressure of life-and-death moments" he was craving. The EMT certificate program offered him the classroom time to "get hip-deep in the things that matter," while the intensive, frenetic hands-on experience prepped him for the real work ahead. With blunt language and a raw narrative tone rich with gruesome detail, Hazzard immerses readers in the bloody, hardened reality of an emergency response team racing to accident scenes and overdoses and the personal panic over a dangerous needle stick. The author pairs his exquisitely queasy collage of bloody vomitus, severed toes, miscarriages, and other medical injustices with profiles of a hodgepodge of able work partners of varying skill levels and personalities who rode alongside Hazzard in the ambulance. Conveyed through anecdotes both thrilling and startlingly gory, it's clear the author indeed became intoxicated by the adrenaline, the rush, and the rhythm of emergency rescue life and the need to be present "for the blurry and frantic moments right after the injury." His adventures also illuminate the many desperate people in need of assistance. Yet after years on a beat rife with stressful urgency and hierarchal politics, his career crested and waned, followed by a complete burnout. With frayed nerves, exhausted patience, and a renewed focus on his own family, Hazzard ended his paramedical livelihood with a hard-won mixture of appreciation and relief, but his stories, immortalized here in compelling detail, remain. A vivid, pummeling ride-along with an emergency paramedic. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

A Thousand Naked Strangers Prologue I did nothing to save the first person who died in front of me. I simply stood watch and let her go. She was old and white and wasting away in a nursing home. Her death was unceremonious, but fast, and I was the only witness, earth's final sentry, there to do nothing but close the gates as she slipped through. I was only twenty-six when she died, but already I'd squandered away two lives--the first as a failed salesman, the other as a reporter in exile. EMS was an accidental third act. It was early 2004, centuries ago. When I look back, I find it hard to believe this death and countless others happened, that at one time my sole purpose was to be present, as either anxious participant or indifferent witness. As with much of my EMS life, the memory is fuzzy: soft light filtered through gauze. It's only the details--the little ones that don't seem to matter at the time--that carry on. So really, what I have is more sensation than recollection, more feeling than anecdote. This is how it all feels to me now. It's my second night, and I'm partnered with a guy who never goes home. He's a firefighter in the next county, but he'll do anything for money and works a handful of part-time jobs. When he isn't here or at the fire station, he sweats over the fryer at McDonald's. Just before ten, we're called to a nursing home for a sick woman. My partner is tired. He walks slowly, eyes to the floor, as we push the stretcher off the elevator and wander down the long corridor to the patient's room. We ease alongside her bed. A nurse hovers in the background, saying the woman didn't eat dinner, isn't acting like herself, and needs to be seen. I take her blood pressure, her pulse, count her breaths. Her eyes are closed; her skin--white and crinkled like parchment paper--is dry and hot. My partner asks for her papers. We don't ever leave a nursing home without papers. Most people in a nursing home can't talk, and those who can don't make sense, so even a question as straightforward as Who are you? doesn't yield usable results. So we get the papers, a thick manila envelope stuffed with everything from medical problems to next of kin. More important, it's in this packet that we'll find insurance information and whether or not there's a do-not-resuscitate order. Ostensibly, we're here for the patient, but really all we care about is the DNR. The DNR is the word of God Himself, written in triplicate and handed over not by Moses but by a big-boned woman in orthopedic nursing shoes. It's in these papers that we'll find answers to the uncomfortable questions that absolutely must be answered. What if she loses consciousness? What if she dies? Do I go all the way--CPR, electric shocks, slip a tube down her throat, drill a hole in her leg for medication? Or do I watch her swirl the drain until she disappears altogether? What does her family want? What would she want? The existence of this piece of paper, even its absence, means a lot. To everyone. At the hospital, the nurses will ask about it, and the doctors won't look at us until we've answered. At her age, in her condition, everyone will agree resuscitation, even if it could be accomplished, would be cruel. So does she have a DNR? The nurse says she does, that it's atop her packet, the first page in the stack. She leaves to get it. And that's when it happens. Before my partner--who's leaning against the wall--coaxes his mass into action. Before I pull back the sheet. Before anyone addresses her directly. She opens her eyes--milky and unfocused--and tilts her head forward. Her lips part and then, without ceremony, she relaxes. Her last breath escapes. A single tear runs down her cheek. I know instantly what's happened. But is it really that simple? That easy? The nurse has just said the patient has a DNR, so that drilled-into-my-head-during-school compulsion to act doesn't kick in. Instead, I spend the first few seconds staring into her vacant eyes, tracing the arc of that single tear--her final corporeal act--and marvel at this woman. Moments ago she was something to pity, bedridden and in a diaper. Now, plucked from her stained nightgown, she is cloaked in the wisdom of the ages. She knows why we're here and, more important, what's next. And if it's not the black nothingness we've feared all along, then how small we must look to her now. In dying she has crossed over. Or hasn't. My partner, unaware she's dead, has finally come to life. He motions for me to grab the other end of the sheet so we can move her onto our stretcher. I need to tell him, let him decide what comes next, but I don't trust my own instincts. I'm brand-new at this, I've never watched someone die. My experience with the dead--recent or otherwise--is limited. If my partner doesn't notice, then perhaps she's not dead. The woman was hardly moving when we arrived and now looks no different. With a yank, we slide her over. He covers her with a sheet, buckles her in, starts pushing. I stare at her chest, her face, looking for signs of life that I know deep down I will not find. We grab her packet, and sure enough, the DNR is stapled to the top. We ride the elevator, step out into the cool night. With a sharp metallic click, the stretcher is snapped into the mount on the floor of the ambulance. "I think she's dead," I say. My partner stops and looks not at her but at me. I clear my throat, tell him I don't think she's breathing. He climbs into the ambulance, looks, feels, deflates. In the absence of the DNR, he might do something, but it's not absent. It's right there, and this document, drafted and signed with the sole intention of clarifying this woman's final moments, instead obscures our next move. Had she died in the nursing home, we'd leave her, but she's here now. Dead on our stretcher. In our ambulance. We have drifted into murky water. He calls the nursing home. "We're in the parking lot," he says. "Your patient is dead." "She's in your ambulance," the nurse tells him, "she's yours now." I stand outside while they argue. Our patient lies in state. What to do with her? The hospital doesn't take dead bodies, nor does the nursing home. This woman has died and no one wants her. She is a corpse in limbo. My partner hangs up. Fumes. He goes back in to explain, to plead, to threaten. I'm not sure why, but he leaves me in the back with her. I sit in the ambulance and stare into the woman's half-open eyes. I grab the packet and flip through. If we are to keep each other company, I should at least know her name. Her birthday. Turns out she is eighty-eight. There aren't many things you can do in the back of an ambulance with a dead woman. My cooler sits in the corner, but no. I could talk to her, but frankly, she is so recently dead, so unchanged from before, I feel as if addressing her directly will wake her. Well, not her but the ghost of her, which is worse. This may sound foolish, but I can assure you that all except the most gruesomely killed or severely decomposed look as if they'll sit up and begin talking at the slightest provocation. I decide to call home. "Are you still awake?" I ask my wife. She says she is. She broke down and started watching the latest episode of The Sopranos without me. "You're gonna love it." When I say nothing, she asks if I'm mad, and after a second I tell her where I am. Tell her that I'm alone with a woman I've watched die and who has become, thanks to my indecision, something of a refugee. She asks how the woman died, and though I know this isn't what she means, I say, "Peacefully." Excerpted from A Thousand Naked Strangers: A Paramedic's Ten-Year Journey to the Edge and Back by Kevin Hazzard 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.