<b>For readers of Henry Marsh's <i>Do No Harm</i> Paul A. Ruggieri's <i>Confessions of a Surgeon</i> <i> </i>and Atul Gawande's <i>Better </i> a pioneering surgeon shares memories from a life in one of surgery's most demanding fields</b> <p/> The 1980s marked a revolution in the field of organ transplants and Bud Shaw M.D. who studied under Tom Starzl in Pittsburgh was on the front lines. Now retired from active practice Dr. Shaw relays gripping moments of anguish and elation frustration and reward despair and hope in his struggle to save patients. He reveals harshly intimate moments of his medical career: telling a patient's husband that his wife has died during surgery; struggling to complete a twenty-hour operation as mental and physical exhaustion inch closer and closer; and flying to retrieve a donor organ while the patient waits in the operating room. Within these more emotionally charged vignettes are quieter ones too like growing up in rural Ohio and being awakened late at night by footsteps in the hall as his father also a surgeon slipped out of the house to attend to a patient in the ER. <p/> In the tradition of Mary Roach Jerome Groopman Eric Topol and Atul Gawande <i>Last Night in the OR </i>is an exhilarating fast-paced and beautifully written memoir <i> </i>one that will captivate readers with its courage intimacy and honesty.
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