Selections from the moving, beautifully crafted diary of a celebrated storyteller and surgeon
Susan Cheever observed in a New York TimesBook Review appraisal of his memoir Down from Troy that Richard Selzer "cares more about truth than consequences . . . [and] immerses us in the facts we all know but hate to admit." Selzer's Diary picks up roughly where the memoir leaves off, as his writing life flourishes and surgical career ends. Stripped of the doctor-writer's "privilege of [walking] about all day in the middle of a short story," Selzer shifts his focus to his interior life. In Diary, the author's successes and regrets, as well as the humor and sadness that surround him, are revealed with the same empathy and vividness that made him one of the great doctor-writers of modern literature.
Diary brings together stories and observations dashed off on park benches and in library carrels over the past decade. Following the success of such books as Confessions of a Knife and TheDoctor Stories, Selzer's diary entries recount life lived in the shadow of both achievement and disappointment. He introduces a varied cast of characters, from the distinguished fellowship of the "Boys Friendly" to his "fellow loonies," and evokes the streets, buildings, and parks of Yale and New Haven with vibrancy and affection. And throughout, Selzer faces the looming specter of old age. The distinctive voice that paved the way for other notable doctor-writers like Jerome Groopman and Abraham Verghese is revealed here to be no less compelling with the spotlight turned on himself and the drama of everyday living.
Show moreSelections from the moving, beautifully crafted diary of a celebrated storyteller and surgeon
Susan Cheever observed in a New York TimesBook Review appraisal of his memoir Down from Troy that Richard Selzer "cares more about truth than consequences . . . [and] immerses us in the facts we all know but hate to admit." Selzer's Diary picks up roughly where the memoir leaves off, as his writing life flourishes and surgical career ends. Stripped of the doctor-writer's "privilege of [walking] about all day in the middle of a short story," Selzer shifts his focus to his interior life. In Diary, the author's successes and regrets, as well as the humor and sadness that surround him, are revealed with the same empathy and vividness that made him one of the great doctor-writers of modern literature.
Diary brings together stories and observations dashed off on park benches and in library carrels over the past decade. Following the success of such books as Confessions of a Knife and TheDoctor Stories, Selzer's diary entries recount life lived in the shadow of both achievement and disappointment. He introduces a varied cast of characters, from the distinguished fellowship of the "Boys Friendly" to his "fellow loonies," and evokes the streets, buildings, and parks of Yale and New Haven with vibrancy and affection. And throughout, Selzer faces the looming specter of old age. The distinctive voice that paved the way for other notable doctor-writers like Jerome Groopman and Abraham Verghese is revealed here to be no less compelling with the spotlight turned on himself and the drama of everyday living.
Show moreRichard Selzer is a former surgeon and Yale School of Medicine professor. He is the author of several collections of stories and essays, including Letters to a Young Doctor and Raising the Dead. He lives in New Haven, CT.
“Worth the price of admission for Selzer's longtime fans, whose
numbers will swell as newcomers become intrigued and delighted by
his wit, perception, and skillful use of language.”—William Beatty
on The Exact Location of the Soul in Booklist
*New Yorker*
"No one writes about the practice of medicine with Selzer's unique
combination of mystery and wonder."—Los Angeles Times
*Los Angeles Times*
"Selzer has a grace all his own, both as a prose stylist and as a
surgeon...patients everywhere should applaud the medical school
administrators who make his books required reading: They teach
young doctors humility, kindness, and compassion."—Susan
Balée, The Philadelphia Inquirer
*Philadelphia Inquirer*
"There is little he cannot achieve with the written word"--Robert
Nathan, New York Times Book Review
*Robert Nathan*
"[Richard Selzer writes of] the care of the terminal and the
treatment of the frail with such vividness and a disarming awe that
it is hard to imagine he has not lived through most of what he
recounts."--Fitzhugh Mullan on The Doctor Stories
in Washington Post Book World
*William Beatty*
"With unflinching eyes and a poet's skill . . . Selzer enables us
to see our bodies in previously unconsidered ways ."—James
Schiff, Book Summit
*Book Summit*
"A passionate, unsentimental celebration of life's messiness,
whether on an operating table or at a dining table."—Kirkus Review
on The Exact Location of the Soul
*Kirkus Review*
"A terrible beauty of a book, full of love and pain and a palpable
rich sadness that will stay with a reader forever"--Library Journal
on Down from Troy
*Library Journal*
“Richard Selzer does for medicine what Jacques Cousteau does for
the sea. He transports the reader to a world that most of us never
see, a world that is vivid and powerful, often overwhelming,
occasionally fantastic...His marvelous insight and potent imagery
make his tales of surgery and medicine both works of art and
splendid tools of instruction.”—Fitzhugh Mullan on Letters to a
Young Doctor in the New York Times Book Review
*Fitzhugh Mullan*
“No matter where [Richard Selzer] takes us, we follow, because he
has the storyteller’s gift.”—New Yorker
*New Haven Advocate*
"[Selzer is] known for his rich language and Diary doesn't
disappoint: It's infused with spicy metaphors, toothsome
images and the pungent vocabulary of medicine. . . . At once his
descriptions are offensive and wonderful."—Anna Reisman, New Haven
Advocate
*Bookforum*
![]() |
Ask a Question About this Product More... |
![]() |