Jump to content
Premed 101 Forums

Bloodletting and Miraculous Cures


Recommended Posts

How many people have read this book? What are your impressions? Can you empathise or agree with Vincent Lam's portrayal of medicine?

 

As a side note, I met Vincent Lam at a book signing and his writting is the most physician-style gibberish ever - I still have no idea what he wrote on my book!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I received this book over the holidays. It is a quick read, but I never made it to the end (I think I have 1-2 more chapters to go). I found it to be realistic, but quite bland and uninspiring. I didn't really enjoy it, maybe because I didn't feel like reading it during clerkship, since I experience medicine all day long. ;)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I read it over Christmas with high hopes but like the general consensus, didn't like it much. That being said, I know at least one person in my class really enjoyed it (but his undergrad was in English Lit). It kind of distracted me with its efforts to be 'literary'. It reminded me of a book I would have had to read & interpret the deeper meanings of in a first year english essay.

 

UBCmed09

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I really enjoyed the beginning of the book... Found that I could really relate to Ming and Fitz during their pre-med years...

 

I also enjoyed the incidents where they are seeing patients... but I was a bit disappointed by the ending... I was expecting to be more inspired lol...

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I enjoyed it. I read quite a bit, and I don't think I like it because of its medical aspects but more because it is good storytelling (imo). I am not a medical student so can't testify to how realistic it is, but I found the writing exceeded any other medical fiction I have read.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I read it 3 weeks ago (it's a pretty fast read), and found it pretty good (it's a pretty relaxing book to read). I too related to Ming and Fitz's premed and med years, and found it hard to lay down the book for 2 seconds (although, I can't compare it to house of god yet, which I've heard good comments (and which I've just ordered a few days ago on amazon :)

 

Maxime

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I enjoyed it, but I grew up in Toronto and could relate to every setting in that city. The book itself kindof had a bland ending but was a fairly entertaining read. As a first-year med student I could relate to a lot of it.

 

I spoke to a girl in my class who said she "hated it," however.

 

I enjoyed The House of God much more. (And my blog :) )

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I found the book good, but not great (half way through I felt like putting it down and leaving it there, but I persisted, and I'm glad that I did so). My favourite medical type book so far has been Atul Gawande's Complications: A Surgeon's Notes on an Imperfect Science. I haven't read House of God yet, but it's now on my reading list!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 3 weeks later...

I'm a med-student-wannabe, and it provided a good insight, from my point of view. Sure, it wasn't uplifting and inspiring, but for how ever long I was immersed in the story, I almost felt like I was part of that world already.

 

And I was looking for more books like that, so thank you guys for providing suggestions. I'm already on Amazon!!!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 3 months later...

I loved it. I don't think it was supposed to be inspiring and uplifting. I think one of the main messages in the book is that entering med school doesn't mean you will be guaranteed the perfect life. It is a warning against the jadedness that physicians feel when the job just becomes a job. But most of all it is a reflection on the individuals. That doctors are not super heros and their self interest comes to play in the desicion they make on a daily basis.

 

Their are beautiful things too in the book but like the rest of life those things they come randomly and we don't always fully appreciate those moments for what they are worth.

 

One other thing that was exceptional was the multicultural perspective that the book gave.

 

That's just me though!!!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The book is not really about medicine. It's about the characters, who happen to be in medicine, which makes sense since the author is well versed in that field. Remember, it's a work of fiction, not non-fiction. As such, it's goal is not to educate or inform, but to provide a lovely flowing story, or in this case, a series of stories.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

overall, i thought it was a good book. i especially enjoyed the beginning of the book... it was captivating, well written, and interesting. the cultural perspective was unique. i couldn't put it down.

 

then around the midpoint of the book i started to lose interest... and i was short on time... eventually just skimmed to the end...

 

but overall, i think it was probably a great book... i agree with one of the posters above, it's one of those books that you could read and analyze for an english class for themes and meaning...

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 4 weeks later...

That book had some freakish coincidences for me not to relate to the beginning, at least.

 

Ladies and gentlemen, observe the evidence

Exhibit A:

Its original short story was set during a biochem/molecular bio exam in those drab gyms at Ottawa U. I took biochem at Ottawa U and wrote the same exams in the same gyms.

 

Exhibit B:

One main characters was Chinese. I'm Chinese.

 

Exhibit C:

That character's name was Ming. My name is also Ming.

 

My jaw pretty much dropped when I motored through the first few pages and took all those details in. Of course, the fact that Ming in the novel was a girl and I'm a guy pretty much ensures that the book wasn't a biography of me--that and the fact that Fitz's awkward creepiness and the general romance in the first half of the novel was so bad it had me laughing.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I did not find Lam's book that great, although I must say it's a very easy read....swallowed it in 2 days. Found the end a bit unfinished. Nevertheless, having read the book was helpful in my UT interview since one of my interviewers was a colleague of Vincent Lam.

 

Try J. Groopman's "How Doctors Think". Although it's not a fiction, it is a great medical book nonetheless. It is thought out, carefully researched, well-written and truly makes one think. I am just starting med school this fall, so I think Ill re-read this book once im entering clerkship or even residency as the book really emphacises the clinical art of medicine.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.

×
×
  • Create New...