An inspired anthology about physical and psychological illness, healing, and healers--featuring a brilliant array of classic and contemporary writers, from Anton Chekhov to Lorrie Moore.
This unique anthology gathers fictional tales of sickness and of healing, both physical and psychological, from a wide variety of times and perspectives. Some of these writers were themselves physicians, notably Anton Chekhov, Arthur Conan Doyle, Somerset Maugham, William Carlos Williams, and Mikhail Bulgakov. Bulgakov's story, taken from A Country Doctor's Notebook , draws on his early experience as a young doctor in rural Russia a century ago, while Anna Kavan's story, from her collection Asylum Piece , is based on her experience of mental illness. Guy de Maupassant, Robert Louis Stevenson, Rudyard Kipling, Joseph Conrad, Graham Greene, J. G. Ballard, Robert Heinlein, Alice Munro, and Lorrie Moore are among the other writers of medical adventures that fill these pages. From Chekhov's "A Doctor's Visit" and William Carlos Williams's "The Paid Nurse" to Dorothy Parker's "Lady with a Lamp," O. Henry's "Let Me Feel Your Pulse," and Jhumpa Lahiri's "Interpreter of Maladies," the stories gathered here are peopled by a colorful and varied cast of doctors, nurses, and patients.
Everyman's Library pursues the highest production standards, printing on acid-free cream-colored paper, with full-cloth cases with two-color foil stamping, decorative endpapers, silk ribbon markers, European-style half-round spines, and a full-color illustrated jacket.
Anthony Malcolm Daniels, who generally uses the pen name Theodore Dalrymple, is an English writer and retired prison doctor and psychiatrist. He worked in a number of Sub-Saharan African countries as well as in the east end of London. Before his retirement in 2005, he worked in City Hospital, Birmingham and Winson Green Prison in inner-city Birmingham, England.
Daniels is a contributing editor to City Journal, published by the Manhattan Institute, where he is the Dietrich Weismann Fellow. In addition to City Journal, his work has appeared in The British Medical Journal, The Times, The Observer, The Daily Telegraph, The Spectator, The Salisbury Review, National Review, and Axess magasin.
In 2011, Dalrymple received the 2011 Freedom Prize from the Flemish think tank Libera!.
“A Doctor’s Visit”, Anton Chekhov, 9/10. “The Forger”, Samuel Warren, 6/10 “The Hard and the Human”, Elizabeth Berridge, 8.5/10 “Sweethearts”, Arthur Conan Doyle, 5/10 “The Embroidered Towel”, Mikhail Bulgakov, 9/10 "The Body Snatchers", Robert Louis Stevenson, 6/10 "Minus One", J.G. Ballard, 4/10 “Interpreter of Maladies,” Jhumpa Lahiri, 10/10 “Back to Back”, WW Jacobs, 6/10 “A Coup d’État,” Guy de Maupassant, 7/10 “Doctor Crombie”, Graham Greene, 7.5/10 “Airing A Grievance”, Anna Kavan, 6/10 “Lord Mountdrago”, W. Somerset Maugham, 7/10 “I Had to Go Sick”, Julian Maclaren Ross, 7/10 "“People Like That are the Only People Here,” Lorrie Moore, 10/10. Really more like 11/10. 100/10. ∞/10. "“Swept and Garnished,” Rudyard Kipling, 6.5/10 “Let Me Feel Your Pulse,” O. Henry, 5/10 “Amy Foster”, Joseph Conrad, 6/10 “Lady With A Lamp”, Dorothy Parker, 2/10 “Life-Line”, Robert A. Heinlein, 7/10 “I Will Keep Her Company”, Rhys Davies, 5/10 “The Moons of Jupiter”, Alice Munro, 10/10
This is the second of these Everyman's Library Pocket Classics anthologies that I've read. The first was called Dog Stories, which I read because I'd recently gotten a puppy. This one I read because I'm in residency--in other words, because I'd recently become a doctor. One of the pleasures of Dog Stories, in addition to the quality of the stories themselves, is the sheer breadth of the ground they cover in terms of humans and the various facets of their relationships to dogs; it was as thrilling to recognize myself in some of those stories as it was not to recognize myself in others. There's something similar in the impulse to read these stories, which I did at the glacial pace--six months, approximately 196 hours per story--that seems to be my default these days. But there are key differences, not all of them favorable to this collection. One is that unlike our relationship with our dogs, medicine is endlessly protean, its core tenets and surface-level day-to-day changing rapidly over the years; this means that the actual medicine practiced in many of these stories is more or less unrecognizable to me now, lacking as it does anything resembling an evidence base ("The Forger," "Back to Back", "Lord Mountdrago"). The other difference is that although many of these writers are doctors, more of them are not--and they're either guessing at the practice of medicine in ways that I don't think really capture what it means to work in this field, or else the actual medicine and physicianship is secondary to the actual narrative concerns the writer has, and this isn't really a medicine story so much as a story that happens to have a doctor (usually a psychiatrist), in it: "Minus One", "Swept and Garnished", "Amy Foster" come to mind here. This is also a failure on the part of the editor, Theodore Dalrymple. A secondary consequence of this too is that certain aspects of the medical profession--public health, scutwork, research, consult etiquette, nursing pages--are entirely neglected here, and therefore it seems less comprehensive in its reach than Dog Stories did. Ultimately, the high points of the book--"Interpreter of Maladies", "People Like That Are The Only People Here", "The Embroidered Towel", and the revelatory "Moons of Jupiter" which closes the collection--redeem the book. These are the stories which remind me of the reason that I got into medicine, which is that it's the greatest of all arenas to observe the human condition, to see people at their worst and best, their most cringeworthy and their most resilient, their most characteristic and their strangest. And this goes not just for patients but for staff too, the sizeable amount of the world's population that chooses to get up every morning and make a life out of this life-preserving force. The stories in this book that do the best justify my belief in medicine as being sufficiently rich in human matter to provide for great literature. Eighteen months of residency has yet to beat this reverence out of me; small wonder that this book of 22 stories was even less able to encompass it more than a handful of times.
Sweethearts The Embroidered Towel Minus One Airing a Grievance People Like That Are The Only People Here: Canonical Babbling in Peed Onk The Moons of Jupiter
I really enjoyed this book. Some of the stories I liked better than others. Some were very boring and I didn’t like the way it was written but a lot of them had me glued to the page and left me wanting more of the story.