“While supervising a small group of interns at a major New York medical center, Dr. It should be required reading for anyone considering a career in medicine. One of the truest books on medicine I’ve ever read. And just like that, the future he and his wife had imagined evaporated.” One day he was a doctor treating the dying, and the next he was a patient struggling to live.
“At the age of thirty-six, on the verge of completing a decade’s worth of training as a neurosurgeon, Paul Kalanithi was diagnosed with stage IV lung cancer.
When Breath Becomes Airby Paul Kalanithi.One of my favorites.They’re mostly books about medicine that are nonfiction, with fiction marked with a (*) and forthcoming books marked (**). I like to think that if you devour reruns of ER and House, that you’ll like these, too. Here, in no particular order, are 50 must-read and best medical books. But I still love reading about medicine, doctoring, and anything in the medical field in medical books. At this point, I have accepted that my graduate school loans are sizable enough, and my life no longer has room for the possibility of ever going to medical school – and besides, when I did take some prerequisites, although I love reading medical textbooks, my brain just does not like rote memorization…which is a problem in the biological sciences. My not-so-secret desire to be a doctor, though, has never really gone away. My love of medicine and people propelled me toward psychology, then public health, where I could combine everything into fields like psychosocial oncology and perinatal psychology. As a preteen, I wanted to be a pediatric oncologist, a dream that continues today.