by James D. Geissinger, Jr. ‧ RELEASE DATE: Nov. 22, 2011
Valuable for medical school students as well as general memoir fans.
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In his debut memoir, a retired neurosurgeon reflects on medical history, his varied career and personal matters.
Geissinger, schooled in the third generation of neurosurgery, came of age in the mid-1950s. His long, often arduous journey led to his successful practice and eventual teaching of neurosurgery. Here, the author is firmly entrenched in the past, and his appreciation of his field’s pioneers is reflected both in the book’s content and tone. The first half of the title is filled with numerous case histories, many of which depict the conditions and procedures during the discipline’s nascent stages. These early practitioners gave the author his healthy perspective on success—something, he maintains, that could benefit modern medical students. The second half of the book veers off its presumed course, when illness pushes Geissinger out of medicine and into careers as a rancher and furniture maker. Eventually, an opportunity arises to reconnect with medicine, this time as an instructor. Geissinger’s memoir appeals on several levels: Medical students will likely find the advice useful, while readers with an interest in neurosurgery will appreciate the book’s focus on pioneering methods. The author’s retired peers will likely relate to stories set during the “golden years.” Furthermore, his approach to this memoir is emblematic of the neurosurgery profession itself: meticulous and sharply compartmentalized. Geissinger painstakingly recounts his many endeavors, including time spent at a ranch “intensely studying the premier bulls to be auctioned off on [a] Saturday morning.” Patient anecdotes, however, would have been much more accessible if indexed by conditions and treatment.
Valuable for medical school students as well as general memoir fans.Pub Date: Nov. 22, 2011
ISBN: 978-0984741809
Page Count: 404
Publisher: CreateSpace
Review Posted Online: June 20, 2012
Review Program: Kirkus Indie
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by Julian Barnes ‧ RELEASE DATE: Feb. 18, 2020
Finely honed biographical intuition and a novelist’s sensibility make for a stylish, engrossing narrative.
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IndieBound Bestseller
A fresh, urbane history of the dramatic and melodramatic belle epoque.
When Barnes (The Only Story, 2018, etc.), winner of the Man Booker Prize and many other literary awards, first saw John Singer Sargent’s striking portrait of Dr. Samuel Pozzi—handsome, “virile, yet slender,” dressed in a sumptuous scarlet coat—he was intrigued by a figure he had not yet encountered in his readings about 19th-century France. The wall label revealed that Pozzi was a gynecologist; a magazine article called him “not only the father of French gynecology, but also a confirmed sex addict who routinely attempted to seduce his female patients.” The paradox of healer and exploiter posed an alluring mystery that Barnes was eager to investigate. Pozzi, he discovered, succeeded in his amorous affairs as much as in his acclaimed career. “I have never met a man as seductive as Pozzi,” the arrogant Count Robert de Montesquiou recalled; Pozzi was a “man of rare good sense and rare good taste,” “filled with knowledge and purpose” as well as “grace and charm.” The author’s portrait, as admiring as Sargent’s, depicts a “hospitable, generous” man, “rich by marriage, clubbable, inquisitive, cultured and well travelled,” and brilliant. The cosmopolitan Pozzi, his supercilious friend Montesquiou, and “gentle, whimsical” Edmond de Polignac are central characters in Barnes’ irreverent, gossipy, sparkling history of the belle epoque, “a time of vast wealth for the wealthy, of social power for the aristocracy, of uncontrolled and intricate snobbery, of headlong colonial ambition, of artistic patronage, and of duels whose scale of violence often reflected personal irascibility more than offended honor.” Dueling, writes the author, “was not just the highest form of sport, it also required the highest form of manliness.” Barnes peoples his history with a spirited cast of characters, including Sargent and Whistler, Oscar Wilde and Sarah Bernhardt (who adored Pozzi), Henry James and Proust, Pozzi’s diarist daughter, Catherine, and unhappy wife, Therese, and scores more.
Finely honed biographical intuition and a novelist’s sensibility make for a stylish, engrossing narrative.Pub Date: Feb. 18, 2020
ISBN: 978-0-525-65877-1
Page Count: 288
Publisher: Knopf
Review Posted Online: Nov. 17, 2019
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Dec. 15, 2019
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PERSPECTIVES
by Annie Dillard ‧ RELEASE DATE: March 13, 1974
This is our life, these are our lighted seasons, and then we die. . . . In the meantime, in between time, we can see. . . we can work at making sense of (what) we see. . . to discover where we so incontrovertibly are. It's common sense; when you-move in, you try to learn the neighborhood." Dillard's "neighborhood" is hilly Virginia country where she lived alone, but essentially it is all those "shreds of creation" with which every human is surrounded, which she is trying to learn, to know — from finite variations to infinite possibilities of being and meaning. A tall order and Dillard doesn't quite fill it. She is too impatient to get about the soul's adventures to stay long with an egg-laying grasshopper, or other bits of flora and fauna, and her snatches from physics and biological/metaphysical studies are this side of frivolous. However, Ms. Dillard has a great deal going for her — in spite of some repetition of words and concepts, her prose is bright, fresh and occasionally emulates (not imitates) the Walden Master in a contemporary context: "Trees. . . extend impressively in both directions, . . . shearing rock and fanning air, doing their real business just out of reach." She has set herself no less a task than understanding emotionally, spiritually and intellectually the force of the creative extravagance of the universe in all its beauty and horhor ("There is a terrible innocence in the benumbed world of the lower animals, reducing life to a universal chomp.") Experience can be focused, and awareness sharpened, by a kind of meditative high. Thus this becomes somewhat exhausting reading, if taken in toto, but even if Dillard's reach exceeds her grasp, her sights are leagues higher than that of Anne Morrow Lindbergh's Gift from the Sea, regretfully (re her sex), the inevitable comparison.
Pub Date: March 13, 1974
ISBN: 0061233323
Page Count: -
Publisher: Harper's Magazine Press
Review Posted Online: Nov. 2, 2011
Kirkus Reviews Issue: March 1, 1974
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