Wednesday, November 19, 2014

Guardian first book award 2014 shortlist covers neurosurgery, China, rural Ireland and more

Judge Mary Beard acclaims ‘accomplished, clever, assured – and, of course, enjoyable’ cross-genre selection contending for £10,000 award

Henry Marsh
Making the cut … neurosurgeon Henry Marsh, whose memoir Do No Harm has reached the shortlist for the Guardian first book award.
The neurosurgeon Henry Marsh, who first turned to writing in his 60s, has won himself a place on the Guardian first book award shortlist for his acclaimed debut dissecting his life as a brain surgeon.
The 64-year-old is the oldest author on a shortlist that also includes two collections of short stories, a novel, and an investigation into modern China. Hailed by the novelist Ian McEwan as a memoir in which “neurosurgery has met its Boswell”, Do No Harm is Marsh’s attempt to show what life is really like for a brain surgeon. Writing in Saturday’s Guardian Review, Marsh explains how the stories try to capture “the fierce joy of operating and the difficulty of balancing compassion and professional detachment; they show how we doctors are as human as our patients”.
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