This book, first published in 1984, was a sort of sequel to Dr. Paul Brand and Philip Yancey's book "Fearfully & Wonderfully Made," but I'm reading them in reverse order.
Dr. Brand devoted almost all of his long medical career to treating lepers, first at a mission hospital in India, and later in Louisiana. Although it is co-written, "In His Image" is written in the first-person, from Dr. Brand's perspective.
If you read this book, you might find yourself in awe of your own body. You might find yourself agreeing with the phrase "fearfully and wonderfully made," which would have been a perfect title for this book if Brand and Yancey hadn't already used it for their first book. And if you're a Christian, you'll probably come to the conclusion that the Apostle Paul's metaphor of the Christian community being the body and Christ the head was more apt and profound than you ever realized before.
The descriptions of the way the body works are amazing; the anecdotes from Dr. Brand's practice gripping.
The chapters on pain are particularly compelling, given the fact that Dr. Brand devoted his life to treating people who can't feel pain and suffer greatly as a consequence. Yes, pain is a good thing.
He shows great respect for what most of us think as irritants. Consider his thoughts about a blister that came upon him while gardening:
My dermis, formerly mashed flat and vulnerable, now has soothing relief from stress as the forces of my spade are gently absorbed by this new structure. Such an adaptation can easily go unappreciated or, worse, be viewed with irritation. But it is a startling phenomenon, requiring the coordination of millions of cells.
Reading "In His Image" was refreshing, particularly in comparison with some of the other books I've read lately.
And now I've read "Fearfully & Wonderfully Made," which somehow is the same book in Goodreads. They definitely are two different books, but certainly the subject matter is the same. I would say that "Fearfully" is not quite as good as "In His Image," but if I had read them in the proper order, I would have said that "In His Image" was even better than "Fearfully," and that would have been more apt.
These books even helped me as a health journalist. Reading them was like a mini-course in anatomy, and a very well-taught one.
My favorite quote from the book is actually from G.K. Chesterton, cited in Chapter 10, "Freedom": "The more I considered Christianity, the more I found that while it had established a rule and order, the chief aim of that order was to give room for good things to run wild."
Well said, Mr. Chesterton.