Category: Reading

  • David Ansell, County

    David Ansell, County

    One of my fave thing about used books is finding signs of the previous reader. In this one, found a United bag tag receipt by a family medicine doctor. A quick Google search and I realized our paths had crossed. Where he did stop? Page 142: “I can’t talk with you now. I’m busy.” (Solid…

  • Mike King, A Spirit of Charity

    Mike King, A Spirit of Charity

    Working in a public hospital leaves you with questions about how and why the safety-net was stitched together. Why are mental illness and renal disease funded differently? Why are grandparents and grandchildren in such different buckets? Did someone actually intend this bureaucratic morass??? No single book answers those questions in a more straightforward manner than…

  • Barbara Ehrenreich, Natural Causes

    Barbara Ehrenreich, Natural Causes

    It’s a winter read, for sure, brimming with bark-stripping broadsides. Ehrenreich was the polemicist medicine deserved because she disliked cant and commerce, favouring science and socialism instead. She surely strips away some truths in the process, but it’s a bracing way to get past the built-up lies of today’s healthcare industry. I only wish she…

  • Anton Chekov, The Steppe and Other Stories

    Anton Chekov, The Steppe and Other Stories

    Minor works from the major doctor-writer. … And yet, gems like– “His reading suggested someone swimming in the sea surrounded by the wreckage of his ship, and trying to save his life by eagerly grasping first one spar and then another.” — capture the survival strategy of a doctor like me.

  • Chekov, The Russian Master And Other Stories

    Chekov, The Russian Master And Other Stories

    Chekov is the Ur-text for physician writers. “Only the rich peasants feared death. The richer they grew, the less they believed in God and and salvation, and if they gave candles and had special masses said, it was only for fear of their earthly end and to be on the safe side. Poorer peasants were…

  • Emma Goldberg, Life On The Line

    Emma Goldberg, Life On The Line

    On the third anniversary of the pandemic-which-shall-not-be-named, I finally read @emmabgo on six NYC med students who graduated early. It has all the vibes–PPE shortages, Face-Timed goodbyes, post-shift Silkwood showers– of the hero era of the pandemic. Grateful she got it all down on paper.

  • JA Baker, The Peregrine

    JA Baker, The Peregrine

    We see patients. We attend to the sick. Doctors like me do neither half as well as this Baker. It’s a book about following peregrines for seven months, but a witness to deep attention. “The hardest thing of all to see is what is really there.” I wish I could see this well as a…

  • Anton Chekhov, Ward Number Six and Other Stories

    Anton Chekhov, Ward Number Six and Other Stories

    A: Chekhov. Q: Which one physician-writer should I read again? “The patients are many and time is short, so transactions are confined to brief questions and the issue of some nostrum such as ammoniated liniment or castor oil.”

  • Sabrina & Corina, Kali Fajardo-Anstine

    Sabrina & Corina, Kali Fajardo-Anstine

    Northside! Fajardo-Anstine writes “our story of our everything” for a place and people rarely encountered in fiction. It gives me such hope to read today’s Denver narrated in this remarkable collection. In many stories, I would close my eyes and revisit the places her characters were navigating. Now, when I return to those places, I…

  • Nobody’s Normal, Roy Richard Grinker

    Nobody’s Normal, Roy Richard Grinker

    As @roygrinker reminds, psychoanalytic and biological accounts of mental illness can both increase stigma. Both serve particular cultural interests, while dis-serving others. Grinker selects capitalism, war, and the body as his chief interests, then writes about them in an incredibly readable way. (For my money, no one has written a more readable account of dimensions…