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Tears of Salt, Pietro Bartolo

Most physicians are telling burnout stories– this is how the work is killing me– these days. Bartolo writes “because I do not want them to be forgotten.” Although trained as an obstetrician, Bartolo takes care of all who wash up on the shores of his island. A beautiful example of how true doctoring means opening…
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The Friend, Sigrid Nunez

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Beat the Reaper, Josh Bazell

Mafioso and medicine? There is an analogy between the two initiations, to be sure, but in Bazell’s page-turner, it’s a crass one. Medical knowledge is just one more skill a killer acquires. In the end, he comes to hate medicine– “The endless suffering and death of patients whose lives I was supposed to fix but…
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American Prison, Shane Bauer

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Emma, Jane Austen

Marriage plots hinge on status–allowance, house, title–but also: health. Before Emma can wed Knightley, they must conquer Mr. Woodhouse’s hypochondria. Emma and Knightley understand Mr. Woodhouse, anticipate his needs, and sacrifice themselves for their ‘patient.’ They have the character of true caregivers.
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Body of Work, Christine Montross

The cadaver is the first patient, the first textbook, the first initiation rite for a medical student. Poet-turned-psychiatrist Christine Montross has the best book on how anatomical dissection is a taking apart of one body to build up another. “With my first cut, I have begun a personal transformation…”
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Also Human, Caroline Elton

Medical science is advancing, while our psychological understanding of doctoring is regressing. So says Elton, a psychologist treating physicians in the UK. A learned reminder that physician burnout is transatlantic and can be ameliorated by improving both halves of the physician-patient relationship.
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Breaking & Mending, Joanna Cannon

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Mansfield Park, Jane Austen

Fanny Price is the most misunderstood of Austen’s heroines, but the heroine Austen understood best. In one of the first novels built upon the interior life of a young woman, Fanny shows up meritocracy by living with “so much true merit and true love.” Killer compliment: “Her mind, disposition, opinions, and habits wanted no half…
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Like, A. E. Stallings
