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About The Book
Description
Author
A doctor shares the good the bad and the ugly from his experience in medicine. Pellegrino an orthopedic surgeon begins his book with a brief family history. The author is the hardworking son of poor parents and was moved to study medicine when his mother succumbed to cancer at a young age. The books subtitle with its folksy feel and the range of Pellegrinos practice including volunteer work in Africa and with the poor and uninsured in the United States create an expectation that the book will have a humanitarian bent. However the bulk of the book is concerned with Pellegrinos for-profit practice in American hospitals and clinics specifically with the more egregious violations of the Hippocratic Oath the doctor witnessed during his years of practice. Pellegrino is now retired but if he brought to his practice the same skills he brings to the problems he raises in each chapter he must have been quite adept at his job. The author has an eagle-eye for detail and structure especially when he dissects the case of an incompetent dishonest doctor taking advantage of military hospitals huge bureaucracy to obscure his deceits. Pellegrinos unwavering dedication to what he believes is right keeps him going through the administrative layers of apathy and denial until he finally makes his case and the offending doctor is removed. But while Pellegrino appears to be the kind of doctor you would want as a surgeon there is also an unsettling amount of resentment and ill will coloring his narrative. While the doctor seems to be motivated by decency and righteousness his accounts of clashes with ego-driven power-mad money-hungry physicians come bearing big chips on their shoulders. Unfortunately he can come off persnickety and priggish at these points and the stiffness of his prose only exacerbates this. There are many good stories here; they just need some warmth and humor to make them truly come alive. Exactitude is great for surgeons not so great for storytelling.-Kirkus Discoveries