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Reviews for Doctors Cry, Too: Essays from the Heart of a Physician

 Doctors Cry, Too magazine reviews

The average rating for Doctors Cry, Too: Essays from the Heart of a Physician based on 2 reviews is 4 stars.has a rating of 4 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2019-11-29 00:00:00
2003was given a rating of 4 stars Robert Craft
A very sensitive, heart-rending and eye-opening account from the perspective of a doctor, M.D. Frank H. Boehm. Originating from Essays which were published in 'The Tennessean', and later turned into a book called, 'Doctors Cry Too'. Extremely thought-provoking and humorous in parts but always revealing the many ways in which doctors are challenged and tested daily, often to the brink of their own humanity. Responses that are emotional and caring are not always forthcoming for the patient's benefit, and yet whether or not the medical profession who are taught to distance themselves for the best care possible can overcome this training, would require more enlightened compassion from each doctor. This would allow for the healing process to proceed more positively as the partnership between the doctor/patient would then enable the trust gained between them to be immeasurable. Highly recommended.
Review # 2 was written on 2012-01-26 00:00:00
2003was given a rating of 4 stars Jerry Ford
'The writing of this book was not always a labor of love.' This is a book about the friendship between Eleanor Roosevelt and Dr David Gurewitsch, her personal physician and friend, during the last fifteen years of Mrs Roosevelt's life. This account is written by David's wife Edna and draws on both the diaries David kept and the hundreds of letters that he and Mrs Roosevelt exchanged over the years of their friendship. In 1962, in one of her letters to Dr Gurewitsch, Mrs Roosevelt had written: 'Above all others you are the one to whom my heart is tied.' Theirs was an intense relationship: they often travelled and entertained together and, after his marriage to Edna in February 1958, the three of them bought and lived in a town house in Manhattan which they divided into two separate apartments. Mrs Gurewitch provides a unique perspective on their private friendship: she has her own memories of each of them as well as their voluminous correspondence and Dr Gurewitsch's diaries. She writes that: 'As a physician, David had private recognition, but he craved public approval. Mrs Roosevelt had public recognition, but she craved intimacy. Each satisfied the other's hunger for acceptance. It was a fair exchange.' She writes as well that: 'Despite the closeness of their bond, evidenced in her extremely caring letters to him, David and Mrs Roosevelt were never lovers. Indeed, the tragedy of this superior woman was that she never had the absolute, intimate love of a man.' The Eleanor Roosevelt who appears through the pages of this book is a kind and generous woman, interested in others, but also lonely and vulnerable, sometimes jealous and sometimes apparently overwhelmed by feelings of inadequacy. And yet, despite these insecurities, Mrs Roosevelt was able to make an enormous contribution to the USA (and the world). A woman born in the late nineteenth century, living through times when few women had any significant role in public life, Mrs Roosevelt seems to have met many challenges of the 20th century with courage and dignity. 'The profound contrast between Mrs Roosevelt's dependence upon receiving love and her considerable awareness of the power of her capabilities - the bottomless neediness that coexisted with her enormous strength - never ceases to amaze me.' While this book was primarily about David Gurewitsch and Eleanor Roosevelt, I find myself wondering about the impact of their close friendship on Edna Gurewitsch's life as David's wife. It is often true that while two is company, three is a crowd. I enjoyed reading this book: it offered me a different and human perspective of Eleanor Roosevelt. Edna Gurewitsch writes: 'She was one of the few people in this world in which greatness and modesty coexisted'. Jennifer Cameron-Smith


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