Search Site   
Current News Stories
Butter exports, domestic usage down in February
Heavy rain stalls 2024 spring planting season for Midwest
Obituary: Guy Dean Jackson
Painted Mail Pouch barns going, going, but not gone
Versatile tractor harvests a $232,000 bid at Wendt
US farms increasingly reliant on contract workers 
Tomahawk throwing added to Ladies’ Sports Day in Ohio
Jepsen and Sonnenbert honored for being Ohio Master Farmers
High oleic soybeans can provide fat, protein to dairy cows
PSR and SGD enter into an agreement 
Fish & wildlife plans stream trout opener
   
News Articles
Search News  
   
Doc makes effort to answer hard questions in new book
 
The Bookworm Sez by Terri Schlichenmeyer 
 
Internal Medicine: A Doctor’s Stories by Terrence Holt
c.2014, Liveright
$24.95/$27.95 Canada
275 pages
It took you a while to get the hang of things. It’s always that way with a new job. Nobody’s born knowing how to work and learning to be proficient takes time, patience and training. 
In the new book Internal Medicine by Terrence Holt, it also takes determination, exhaustion and the knowledge you can’t fix everything. Some stories simply can’t be told. On a March day during his intern year, when he and several dozen people were engaged in a cacophonous “roar and babble” at the nursing desk, Terrence Holt suddenly realized no description would ever do justice to that which he’d been experiencing. It was “too manifold, too layered” to describe.
In the month after graduation from medical school, he decided to try anyhow.
Though the memories are “hazy,” Holt recalls how asking for assistance from your attending was rumored to be a “sign of weakness,” even though there were times when the help would’ve been more than merely welcome. Even when nothing can be done, it’s easier when you do it with someone. Young interns learn to give bad news, which is nearly impossible to teach – especially when the answer to the question, “What next?” is, “I don’t know.” It’s impossible to teach because sometimes, a doctor does know what’s next. Both parties do, in fact, but he “couldn’t say that, either.”
There were times for Holt when patients weren’t “playing by … rules” that demanded lucidity and a hospital stay with no problems. Of course, a lack of the former often made the patient blissfully, “eternally unaware” of his impending death, of which Holt admits he was “almost envious.”
No matter how much training an intern gets, he has to learn by himself there are choices nobody wants to make, but he must. He has to learn that lifesaving can be “a sorry gift I have to offer …”
He eventually understands that first impressions don’t last; that a mask shouldn’t mask the personality beneath it; that death often does dual duty; that patients lie; and that, despite what anybody says, “you couldn’t count on second chances.”
In the introduction of Internal Medicine, author Terrence Holt muses about ethics and privacy when writing about patients. Because of those issues, he says, the patients in this book are factional “assemblages … compiled from multiple cases” made to “capture the essence of something too complex to be understood any other way.”
Trust me: Fact or fiction isn’t going to matter once you start this exquisite book of essays. You’ll be too wrapped up in living and dying, in exhaustion, fog and the torment of both author and patient.
Indeed, Holt is a poet in a white coat with a literary bedside manner that allows us to absorb the shock of his words as we simultaneously note the beauty of them. I carried this book around with me for three days because once it’s started, it’s difficult to let it go. If you’ve ever pondered your length between life and death, grab Internal Medicine and hang on.


10/2/2014