Skip to main content
PBS logo
 
 

Search - A Surgeon's World

A Surgeon's World
A Surgeon's World
Author: William A. Nolen
With warmth and honesty, Dr. Nolen breaks through the mystery that surrounds the practice of medicine. He talks about himself as a doctor and about other doctors as he knows them. How they get along with each other. What they are like in the hours away from the office. Even the special problems of a doctor's wife.
ISBN: 345665
Publication Date: 1970
Pages: 352
Rating:
  ?

0 stars, based on 0 rating
Publisher: Fawcett Crest
Book Type: Paperback
Other Versions: Hardcover
Members Wishing: 0
Reviews: Member | Write a Review
Read All 1 Book Reviews of "A Surgeons World"

Please Log in to Rate these Book Reviews

Readnmachine avatar reviewed A Surgeon's World on + 1440 more book reviews
This one's a real snoozer folks, and I admit I skimmed a lot of it.

First, it's extremely dated. Written in the 1970s, it discusses procedures no longer used and gives short shrift to things like heart transplants, which were in their infancy at the time Nolen wrote his book. Second, it is rife with a sexism that â even though it was certainly prevalent at the time â will turn off most modern readers. All doctors are âheâ; all nurses (with the exception of one nurse-anesthetist) are âsheâ. Nolen routinely withholds medical information from his female patients, discusses treatment and prognosis only with their husbands, and apparently considers most women hypochondriacs. He worries about his kids smoking marijuana, but blithely describes adults (including hospital patients) puffing away on cigarettes, and seems to spend a fair amount of time knocking back the booze in the evenings and on weekends as he parties at the country club.

Reading through the first third of the book is like slogging through wet cement. Nolen spends thousands of words on his family history, meeting his wife, producing six children with her in seven years(!), why he began writing about his experiences, how he chose to settle in a small Minnesota town, how the business side of medical practice groups work, etc.

Eventually, he gets to the only portion of the book that is even mildly interesting, where he discusses various case histories. It's kind of like James Herriott's âAll Things Bright and Beautiful' series, only with people rather than animals.

Animals are more interesting.


Genres: