way more
Member
mac said:
This was a pretty sweet book. In addition to being smart, driven, and sassy Dr. Holland is humble and self-aware so her autobiography doesn't read as shameless self promotion. Like say a Richard Feynman book.
The book provides a intimate view of life in psychiatric E.R. A place not built to actually treat the mentally ill but instead "tag and release" all but the most dangerous of the afflicted. Dr. Holland talks about her stellar rise in medicine with a twinge of embarrassment when recalling the crass, boastful and downright flirtatious behavior that marked her early medical career. Her bio becomes more relevant when she realizes her provocative attitude is dangerous in the ER and we get to observe her own therapy sessions.
Therapy sessions are boring even if you are are the one doing all the talking but the psycho-analytical interactions of a asylum shrink and a Manhattan shrink is unique and entertaining. At the same time we see the physical dangers in her line of work. An assault by a patient she correctly identifies as "faking it" for a place to sleep, a jealous former colleague sending sexually violent messages, and the daily risks of working with and angering the worlds sickest minds.