When Breath Becomes Air

In May 2013, Paul Kalanithi was a sixth-year resident in neurosurgery at Stanford. Twenty-two months later, he was dead at age 37 of lung cancer. When Breath Becomes Air is the frank and moving account of his striving to excel in one of medicine's most demanding specialties while his life was shadowed by the terror of a terminal illness.

Kalanithi's memoir divides into two distinct narratives: first, the road to early success in the medical profession, a journey that included a detour for a master's in English literature; second, the tragic tale of his losing battle against cancer. His account of the "black hole that is neurosurgical residency "features familiar stories of 100-hour workweeks and emotional stress from dealing with daily life-and-death decisions. One especially striking aspect of When Breath Becomes Air is the speed at which Kalanithi moves from the mental outlook of being a doctor to that of being a patient when he must face "the same existential quandaries my patients faced."

It's impossible to reach the end of this all-too-brief memoir without mourning the loss of a brilliant, compassionate doctor, and wondering what contributions he might have made to medical science had he lived. Failing that, we can only be grateful that he's left behind the inestimable gift of this book. --Harvey Freedenberg, attorney and freelance reviewer

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