Although the book is a bit dated, the intent of the author to capture the lives of hospital personnel when the coats and rubber gloves come off is accomplished. For the most part, the topic of the interviews Medved does with everyone from big-name surgeons to the tech who runs the morgue focus on love, marriage, and the stress working in a hospital places on personal relationships. I wish it instead would have focused more on the patients and how exactly each person's role fits into making the hospital a successful, functioning organization, but Medved made it clear from the beginning that wasn't his purpose for the book. I didn't find any one interview particularly interesting, by the end they all somewhat sounded the same, but did enjoy the chapters that focused on multiple anecdotes from the interview subjects on the same topic, as those topics often were work-related. His transitions from chapter to chapter seemed quite smooth, as if he asked the person being interviewed specifically about the subject of the next interview, so I'm not sure if it just worked out that way or he took a bit of creative liberty to engineer those transitions. Overall, an OK book, but it reminded me of the kind of book that would accompany a show like 'Grey's Anatomy' (but 30+ years ago) and explain which doctors and nurses have hooked up, broken up, or hate each other's guts, whereas I would have liked to know more about the medical and professional goings-on.