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Loading... Mortal Lessons: Notes on the Art of Surgeryby Richard Selzer
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. Selzer likes language and the romance of the written word. Sometimes his writing veers toward self-conscious overdrive, smacking of Montagne, Emerson, Longfellow, of an era past, but his stories and the patients he writes about kept me glued to the page. He is a classic essayist, using words and anecdotes to reach an answer to a question he isn't sure he knows how to ask, until the writing reveals it to him. Some of the essays are less strong than others; when he waxes long on the liver and on other individual organs, I am less interested than when he looks at deeper philosophical questions about humanity, medicine, religion, faith, and how these subjects rise in the operating theatre. But he certainly can wax! And his thinking on medicine and religion, the question of the soul and the body, are intelligent, deeply thoughtful and meaningful, and inspiring. no reviews | add a review
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In this collection of nineteen unforgettable essays, Dr. Selzer describes unsparingly the surgeon’s art. Both moving and perversely funny, Mortal Lessons is an established classic that considers not only the workings and misworkings of the human body but also the meaning of life and death. With a Preface written by the Author especially for this edition. No library descriptions found. |
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)617Technology Medicine & health Surgery, regional medicine, dentistry, ophthalmology, otology, audiologyLC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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It's also an old book, and of course outdated in lots of things. Much of it admitting no understanding, no hope for cure, or putting forth mistaken ideas. I was surprised and kind of annoyed that he goes on and on in one chapter about how horrible alcohol is for the liver- and yet spends another chapter extolling his own smoking habit. It's illustrated here and there with woodcuts, engravings and lithographs from the Yale Medical Library- they're not dated but give the work a feeling of more antiquity... The last part of it digresses from the main subject matter. Some short writings describing his childhood, his father's practice. There's an essay on being carsick- something he suffered a lot from as a child- and another rather weird one about birdwatching (which he apparently was not very good at).
And yet for all its flaws, the book was a thing I wondered at. It made me see the inner workings of the body in such a different way. Its words are so vivid, so alive.
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