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Doctors at War
2017,2018
Doctors at Waris a candid account of a trauma surgical team based, for a tour of duty, at a field hospital in Helmand, Afghanistan. Mark de Rond tells of the highs and lows of surgical life in hard-hitting detail, bringing to life a morally ambiguous world in which good people face impossible choices and in which routines designed to normalize experience have the unintended effect of highlighting war's absurdity. With stories that are at once comical and tragic, de Rond captures the surreal experience of being a doctor at war. He lifts the cover on a world rarely ever seen, let alone written about, and provides a poignant counterpoint to the archetypical, adrenaline-packed, macho tale of what it is like to go to war.
Here the crude and visceral coexist with the tender and affectionate. The author tells of well-meaning soldiers at hospital reception, there to deliver a pair of legs in the belief that these can be reattached to their comrade, now in mid-surgery; of midsummer Christmas parties and pancake breakfasts and late-night sauna sessions; of interpersonal rivalries and banter; of caring too little or too much; of tenderness and compassion fatigue; of hell and redemption; of heroism and of playing God. While many good firsthand accounts of war by frontline soldiers exist, this is one of the first books ever to bring to life the experience of the surgical teams tasked with mending what war destroys.
Cancerland; Pretty Is What Changes Impossible Choices, the Breast Cancer Gene, and How I Defied My Destiny Jessica Queller Spiegel & Grau: 248 pp., $24.95
2008
Having the BRCA1 gene meant Queller had an 87% chance of developing breast cancer and faced three new choices: ignore it -- surprisingly, women do; practice extreme vigilance, with frequent checkups, mammograms and other tests, and the constant worry that every twinge is cancer; have a prophylactic double mastectomy.
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