Darkly funny, often sad, frequently frightening, and sometimes hopeful...the product of a gifted literary writer.
To read the entire review, see Odd, intriguing stories of quacks and cures.
Darkly funny, often sad, frequently frightening, and sometimes hopeful...the product of a gifted literary writer.
At the heart of the stories is a deep sympathy for the fallibility of the human condition. However damaging some of the characters prove to be (both to themselves and others), they are all comprehensible... a deliciously good read.
Trust given to doctors, after an amazing story full of errors, the dominant note of the volume of "brain Dr Olaf van Schuler. It is the story, divided into several short prose, independent only at first sight, in which doctors play, often without drift, the main role.
Beliefs on when the doctors seem to be the fruit of sick minds--how else could we explain with certainty that it says that a drinker can light up in blue and millstone burnt by fire.
Reaching the van Schuler family history in the twentieth century, meet a doctor elated by the mammary implants with silicone.
Christopher Castellani, author of "The Saint of Lost Things" and director of Grub Street, recommends "Doctor Olaf van Schuler's Brain," by Kirsten Menger-Anderson (Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill): "Tracing 12 generations of doctors as they seek a cure for pain and madness, these linked stories masterfully combine the fascinating and utterly strange history of medicine with a colorful history of New York City. The characters are vivid and unforgettable; Menger-Anderson's sensibility is wholly original."
This fantastic debut by Kirsten Menger-Anderson is the best book I’ve read in the past few months...It astonishes how the author is able to illuminate a person’s life, in all its pain and glory, in a mere twenty page chapter.