Published in:
01-10-2015 | Editorial
Henry Marsh in His World
Author:
Curtis W. Hart
Published in:
Journal of Religion and Health
|
Issue 5/2015
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Excerpt
English neurosurgeon Henry Marsh has written a memoir Do No Harm Stories of Life, Death, and Brain Surgery (St. Martin’s. New York, 2015) deserving of attention from a broad range of readers: clinicians, administrators, a general public interested in what the practice of medicine and surgery is really like, and those who seek to write honestly about the course of their lives and careers. In a recent issue of this Journal (53[6], pp. 1923–1929) I wrote an essay entitled Harvey Cushing, M.D., in his World based on the life and historical context of one of the great pioneers in the field of neurosurgery Harvey Cushing (1869–1939). It was first given as a Grand Rounds presentation made to the Department of Neurosurgery at the New York Presbyterian Hospital Weill Cornell Center in New York in 2006. Before and since that occasion I have spent a good deal of time and effort thinking and talking about writing with friends, colleagues, and contributors to the Journal. From that perspective I have come to believe how necessary it is for those who write to keep in mind the words of Ernest Hemingway, “All you have to do is to write one true sentence.” Reading Henry Marsh’s Do No Harm only confirms for me Hemingway’s admonition. …