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Book ReviewsWithout much fanfare, we have introduced a new section, Book Reviews, appropriate enough for a journal like this. We welcome contributions and notices from the readers. If you are impressed by a book, old or new, that has something to do with medicine or medical practice, and think it deserves attention, send us a review. Although we ask you to follow the format of title, author, publisher, and year, your words can be as free as you like. Years ago, probably in the 1960s, I suggested that physicians get CME credit for going to pornographic movies because back then we had so little knowledge of the increasingly idiosyncratic sexual habits of the times. That didn’t move the authorities, but movies, books, and many other feats of imagination, can help us physicians understand our patients better and maybe even ourselves. So, if you have seen a movie that you want to review or comment on, send it along too! We can easily change the title of this new section to simply “Reviews.” - Howard Spiro (howard.spiro@yale.edu) *** You Don’t Have To Be Famous: How To Write Your Life Story by Steve Zousmer. Bridge and Tunnel by John Hennessy. Watermark by Jacquelyn Pope. Re Verse: Essays on Poetry and Poets by David R. Slavitt. Caring for Mother: A Daughter's Long Goodbye by Virginia Stem Owens. Prescribing by Numbers: Drugs and the Definitions of Disease by Jeremy A. Greene. The Snow Leopard by Peter Matthiessen. How People Change: The Short Story as Case History by William Tucker. Final Exam by Pauline Chen. Bill by Bill Rector. What Really Matters – Living a Moral Life Amidst Uncertainty and Danger Ethics and AIDS in Africa: The Challenge to Our Thinking Patients Are a Virtue. Clinical Tales in the Art of Medicine Body of
Diminishing Motion: Poems and a Memoir |
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