by Eric Manheimer (Find this book)
Bellevue's former medical director offers unusual clarity, empathy, and
insight in these stories from the bedside at the nation's oldest
hospital and, Manheimer notes, perhaps its most famous public one. Yet
Manheimer offers far more than remarkable medical dramas: he blends each
patient's personal experiences with their social implications. Juan, an
addict with a long criminal record, shows indomitable strength in
battling cancer in the hospital's prison unit as the hospital presses
for his compassionate release. For Manheimer, his case illustrates a
broken prison system. For Tanisha, an emotionally damaged teen, one
caring foster family gives her a last shot at happiness and demonstrates
the problems of psych treatment for kids. Equally gripping tales
include that of addict Arnie, a former Wall Street success story whose
demons nearly destroyed his son, and whose slow slog to recovery
highlights the nature of forgiveness. But perhaps the most moving tale
of all is Manheimer's own as a cancer patient, he learns far more about
despair and hope than most physicians can imagine. Manheimer offers a
window onto a unique hospital and the wisdom of a healer who tends with
equal skill to patients and the world. Agents: Jim Levine and Lindsay
Edgecombe, Levine Greenberg Literary Agency. (July 10) Copyright 2012
Reed Business Information. -- Publishers Weekly