Alive Our bodies and the richness and brevity of existence

Gabriel Weston

Book - 2025

"A profound and provocative journey through the human body from a surgeon and award-winning writer. What does it mean to live in a body? For Gabriel Weston, there was always something missing from the anatomy she was taught at medical school. She'd forged an unconventional path, first studying humanities and getting an entry-level job in publishing, before a spark of inspiration set her on the path to becoming a doctor. Medicine teaches us how a body functions, but it doesn't help us navigate the reality of living in one. As Weston became a surgeon, a mother, and ultimately a patient herself, she found herself grappling with the gap between scientific knowledge and unfathomable complexity of human experience. In this captivat...ing exploration of the body, Weston dissolves the boundaries that usually divide surgeon and patient, pushing beyond the limit of what science has to tell us about who we are and leaning on her roots in the humanities. Focusing on our individual organs, not just under the intense spotlight of the operating theatre, but in the central role they play in the stories of our lives, a fuller and more human picture of our bodies emerges: more fragile, frightening and miraculous than we could have imagined. Intimate, penetrating and original, Alive is about our bodies and bonds, the richness and brevity of existence, and the thread of mortality that connect us all"--

Saved in:
1 copy ordered
Subjects
Published
Boston, Massachusetts : Godine 2025.
Language
English
Main Author
Gabriel Weston (author)
Physical Description
pages cm
ISBN
9781567928235
  • Dead
  • Bone
  • Genitals
  • Gut
  • Womb
  • Lungs
  • Skin
  • Breast
  • Kidney
  • Brain
  • Liver
  • Heart
  • Alive.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Surgeon Weston (Dirty Work) takes readers on an engrossing tour of the human body. Surveying how organs function, Weston explains that the lungs, for instance, push air down passageways that "terminate in grape-like clusters called alveoli," where oxygen crosses the "gossamer-thin" barrier between the airway and surrounding capillaries that then transport the oxygenated blood to the heart. Walkthroughs of common surgical interventions are as gripping as they are grisly, as when Weston details how harvesting a heart requires quickly draining the body by making "long slashes in the biggest veins," dumping "fish-market quantities of ice into the cavern of chest and abdomen," and moving the heart to an apparatus that pumps blood through it until it's time for transplantation. Weston shatters common misconceptions, as when she explains that sex isn't solely determined by whether one has a Y chromosome. For example, people with congenital androgen insensitivity syndrome possess X and Y chromosomes but have "female" external genitalia because their bodies process male hormones atypically. Weston's evocative descriptions will change how readers see the body (in a particularly unsettling passage, she recounts "beholding a surgeon opening a patient's face as easily as if it were a book, to remove a large tumour") and the anatomical trivia illuminates the astounding complexity of ordinary bodily functions. This captivates. (Mar.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved