Next book

SIZWE’S TEST

A YOUNG MAN’S JOURNEY THROUGH AFRICA’S AIDS EPIDEMIC

Meandering and laden with extraneous details, Steinberg’s narrative nonetheless builds a disturbing picture of a society...

A South African journalist probes into the disconnect between modern medicine and a severely stressed tribal culture in a nation where some six million people, more than one in eight citizens, are HIV-positive.

Steinberg (The Number: One Man’s Search for Identity in the Cape Underworld and Prison Gangs, 2005, etc.) focuses on two men: Sizwe Magadla, a shopkeeper in a small, poor, remote village in the Lusikisiki district of the country’s Eastern Cape Province, and Dr. Hermann Reuter, who runs an antiretroviral treatment program there. In cooperation with the provincial health department, the international organization Médecins Sans Frontières (Doctors Without Borders) has set up local healthcare clinics to test and administer antiretroviral medicines. With Sizwe as his interpreter, Steinberg spends time at Lusikisiki’s clinics, observing the treatment program, getting to know nurses and patients and following the workings of a support group for HIV-positive patients. In Reuter’s view, if good AIDS treatment is provided, people will come and get it. However, Sizwe refuses to be tested, and Steinberg wants to understand why. Conversations with the skeptical Sizwe reveal not just a fear of demons and witchcraft and a suspicion that white doctors’ needles impart sickness, but deeper issues. The author eventually realizes that Sizwe will not be tested because to be found HIV-positive would mean he could not marry or have children to carry on his name. His individual story reveals the limitations of treatment programs in a place where medicine has long been seen as an ingredient in white political power.

Meandering and laden with extraneous details, Steinberg’s narrative nonetheless builds a disturbing picture of a society caught in a tragic situation with no clear solutions.

Pub Date: Feb. 1, 2008

ISBN: 978-1-4165-5269-7

Page Count: 368

Publisher: Simon & Schuster

Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Dec. 1, 2007

Categories:
Next book

LET'S JUST SAY IT WASN'T PRETTY

Light entertainment from a witty woman.

A breezy little volume by an actress facing old age with aplomb.

Now in her late 60s, Keaton, an Academy Award winner in 1977 for her role in Woody Allen’s Annie Hall, sprinkles memories of her long career, including her friendships and more with certain leading men, into a mishmash of thoughts about childhood, beauty and parenting. The author’s attitude toward her own physical flaws—drooping eyes, a less-than-perfect nose, thinning hair—is meant to be reassuring to self-critical female readers. There is a rationale behind the omnipresent hats, tinted glasses and turtlenecks that other women might consider, but Keaton’s message is that everyone should do their own thing. Never married, she is raising two adopted children, now teenagers, who figure prominently in the narrative. Even movie stars, it seems, have ordinary parenting problems and bad days. Woven into the domestic scenes are recollections of film roles and fellow actors. Readers looking for chitchat about celebrities will be gratified; Keaton drops plenty of names, although at times, they seem to be somewhat forcefully injected into her narrative. The author is generous in her comments about others, giving full credit to her longtime friend Allen for launching her career and speaking well of the leading men in her life. For the record, Keaton reports that Warren Beatty, her co-star in Reds, had a pretty face, but Al Pacino, with whom she acted in the Godfather films, had a beautiful one. There are no illustrations; however, Keaton’s eye for detail makes them unnecessary. One caveat: The text is exceedingly brief, an afternoon’s read at best. The type is heavily leaded to fill out the pages, giving the impression that there’s more than is being delivered.

Light entertainment from a witty woman.

Pub Date: April 29, 2014

ISBN: 978-0-8129-9426-1

Page Count: 224

Publisher: Random House

Review Posted Online: May 26, 2014

Kirkus Reviews Issue: June 15, 2014

Next book

A SHORT GUIDE TO A LONG LIFE

Useful but disappointingly commonplace tips.

In a follow-up to The End of Illness (2012), which explored how technological advances will transform medicine, Agus (Medicine and Engineering/Univ. of Southern California) restates time-tested but too often overlooked principles for healthy living.

The author outlines simple measures that average citizens can take to live healthier lives and extend their life spans by taking advantage of modern technology to develop personalized records. These would include a list of medical tests and recommended treatments. Agus also suggests keeping track of indicators that can be observed at home on a regular basis—e.g., changes in energy, weight, appetite and blood pressure, blood sugar and general appearance. He advises that all of this information be made available online, and it is also helpful to investigate family history and consider DNA testing where indicated. Along with maintaining a healthy weight, Agus emphasizes the importance of eating a balanced diet, with plenty of fresh fruits and vegetables and a minimum of red meat. Avoid packaged vitamins and food supplements, and if possible, grow your own vegetables or buy frozen vegetables, which will generally be fresher than those on supermarket shelves. The author also warns against processed foods that make health claims but contain additives or excessive amounts of sugar or fat. Regular mealtimes and plenty of sleep, frequent hand-washing and oral hygiene are a must; smoking and excessive time in the sun should also be avoided. Agus recommends that adults should consider taking statins and baby aspirin as preventative measures. He concludes with a decade-by-decade checklist of annual medical examinations that should be routine—e.g. blood pressure, diabetes and cholesterol screenings, from one’s 20s on; colonoscopies, prostate exams and mammograms later—and a variety of top-10 lists (for example, “Top 10 Reasons to Take a Walk”).

Useful but disappointingly commonplace tips.

Pub Date: Jan. 7, 2014

ISBN: 978-1-4767-3095-0

Page Count: 128

Publisher: Simon & Schuster

Review Posted Online: Sept. 30, 2013

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Oct. 15, 2013

Categories:
Close Quickview