Brainy memoir a stirring slice of life
'Another Day in the Frontal Lobe' is no ordinary memoir
Date published: 6/4/2006
By CAROLYN HUCKABAY
"Grey's Anatomy" fans, take note: Truth is stranger, and also far more interesting, than fiction.
In other words, if you like medical dramas, you'll undoubtedly fall for neurosurgeon Katrina Firlik's fascinating memoir "Another Day in the Frontal Lobe," a book that is at once funny and poignant, informative and light-hearted, without the commercials.
Firlik, a rarity in the neurosurgery world based on her gender alone, keenly opens a door not many readers would even consider passing through: She lets us in on the brain, how it works, and the complicated life of the "part scientist, part mechanic" types who work on the brain for a living.
From the start, the author sets a trap for us we can't help but fall into: She turns the brain from a foreign concept that's over most people's heads into something interesting, relatable and even fun: "The brain is soft. Some of my colleagues compare it to toothpaste, but that's not quite right. It doesn't spread like toothpaste. It doesn't adhere to your fingers the way toothpaste does. Tofu--the soft variety, if you know tofu--may be a more accurate comparison."
Firlik takes us through her residency program, a seven-year stretch that has clearly defined who she is as a surgeon, and also fundamentally changed who she is as a person.
With clarity befitting a scholar matched with a comic's sharp wit, it's hard to believe that Firlik's calling is in medicine--that is, until she discloses stories about her more memorable patients. She's operated on a severely mentally challenged 7-year-old, told a new father he wouldn't live to see his child's fifth birthday, and extracted a parasite from a schizophrenic man's frontal lobe.
From these and myriad other day-to-day experiences, it's obvious that Firlik's brilliance as a surgeon has not trumped her vulnerability and compassion; she's the kind of doctor you'd want in your corner, and she obviously loves her job despite its disadvantages.
Life outside the hospital, if such a thing exists for neurosurgeons, provides a nice contrast within Firlik's memoir. Not only does she teach us about CT scans and "brain lifts," but she lets us in on her personal life, as well, waxing philosophical on Buddhism, the artwork of Andy Goldsworthy and the multifaceted relationship she has with her surgeon father, not to mention her surgeon husband.
Another Day in the Frontal Lobe: A Brain Surgeon Exposes Life on the Inside
By Katrina Firlik
(Random House, 288 pages, $24.95) |
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Date published: 6/4/2006
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