Category Archives: Autobiographical

Black Swan Green (2006)

We already reviewed David Mitchell’s first novel Ghostwritten (1999) in which we list his novels in order of date written.

After reading “Black Swan Green” I should probably re-read “Catcher in the Rye”. In Mitchell’s version, Jason Taylor is a 13 year old student living in Worcestershire, England. For a well-written review see the Wikipedia review. If there is a theme that stands out, it is Jason’s struggle to fit in with the crowd, made very difficult by the fact that he stutters and that he is bullied mercilessly. It doesn’t help that his parents don’t get along.

My Stroke of Insight (2009)

Jill Bolte Taylor, Ph.D wrote this New York Times bestseller after 8 years of recovery from a stroke. At the age of 37 she experienced an arteriovenous malformation (AVM) which accounts for only 2 percent of all hemorrhagic strokes. Prior to the stroke she was a trained and published neuroanatomist who was working in the Harvard Medical School Department of Psychiatry at McLean Hospital in Belmont. Among other tasks, she collected brains.

What makes this book unique is that as a trained neuroanatomist she was able to describe in minute and personal detail the experience of having such a stroke. She could literally watch her brain systems shut down, one by one. She was alone in her apartment when the stroke occurred. Just how she managed to call for help is a suspense short story in its own right.

Initially the book explains the science of the brain for the reader. It then covers the stroke experience. Following that it describes her treatment (and more importantly, her mistreatment) by hospital staff. From that experience she is able to offer suggestions for how to treat stroke victims. The hero in the story is her mother who immediately came to live with her and devised years of patient painstaking day-by-day care.

Despite the fact that the book is repetitive and preachy (the author is a bit full of herself), it offers a fascinating insight indeed into the horror of a stroke.

The House of God (1978)

Direct quote from Alex Beam in the Boston Globe:

Give the doctor his due: The staying power of Stephen Bergman’s 1978 novel, “The House Of God,” is astonishing. (Begman published the book under the pseudonym Samuel Shem.) Largely ignored when it first came out, with its author shunned by his colleagues for telling tales out of medical school, “The House of God” has since sold more than 2 million copies. It appears on med-school syllabuses and has become a cult classic in the shadowy insider world of aspiring doctors.

“The House of God” is a book to which few are indifferent. A dark, satirical bildungsroman set in the hurly-burly of Beth Israel Hospital’s emergency room, where Bergman worked as an intern, it has been dismissed – by a doctor, or course – as “a piece of trash.” John Updike loved the book and in 1995 contributed a near-fulsome introduction, comparing it quite aptly to Joseph Heller’s classic “Catch-22”; Bergman’s work “glows with the celebratory essence of a real novel,” he wrote.

My son and I confessed to each other that we didn’t read much past the iconic sex scenes in the middle of the 400-page novel. That’s OK: Updike loved the gamy parts, too. “The sex is most conspicuous,” he wrote, “an in the orgies with Angel and Molly acquires an epic size and pornographic ideality.”

But the clean parts stay with you too. Who can forget ER epithets like “LOLNAD” (Little Old Lady in No Apparent Distress) or “GOMER” (Get Out of My Emergency Room), taught to the impressionable young interns by the profane, countercultural resident, the Fat Man. Said Fat Man counsels his young charges that “the only good admission is a dead admission” (because they don’t have to be turfed out of the ER to another service) and to avoid touching patients at all costs. Why? Because they are sick!

In addition to lucrative sales, Bergman and his book have something else to boast about: newfound respectability. Writing in the British medical journal The Lancet, Anne Hudson Jones compared “The House of God” to Sinclair Lewis’s Arrowsmith.” Bergman contributed a long article about his book to an American College of Physicians Journal last year and guesses that he has addressed more than 50 medical school commencements in the United States and Europe in the past decade.

But none in Boston, where memories are long and fuses short.