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Mortal Lessons: Notes on the Art of Surgery
— published 1976 — 3 editions |
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Letters to a Young Doctor
— published 1982 — 4 editions |
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Confessions of a Knife
— published 1979 — 4 editions |
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The Doctor Stories
— published 1998 — 2 editions |
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The Exact Location of the Soul: New and Selected Essays
— published 2001 — 2 editions |
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Raising the Dead: A Doctor's Encounter with His Own Mortality
— published 1993 — 4 editions |
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Down from Troy: A Doctor Comes of Age
— published 1992 — 5 editions |
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Taking the World in for Repairs
— published 1986 — 3 editions |
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Rituals of Surgery
— 4 editions |
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The Whistlers' Room: Stories and Essays
— published 2004 — 3 editions |
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“I stand by the bed where a young woman lies, her face postoperative, her mouth twisted in palsy, clownish. A tiny twig of the facial nerve, the one to the muscles of her mouth has been severed. She will be thus from now on. The surgeon had followed with religious fervor the curve of her flesh; I promise you that. Nevertheless, to remove the tumor in her cheek, I had to cut the little nerve. Her young husband is in the room. He stand on the opposite side of the bed and together they seem to dwell in the evening lamplight, isolated from me, private. Who are they, I ask myself, he and this wry mouth I have made, who gaze at and touch each other so generously, greedily? The young woman speaks, "Will my mouth always be like this?" she asks. "Yes," I say, "it will. It is because the nerve was cut." She nods and is silent. But the young man smiles. "I like it," he says, "It is kind of cute." "All at once I know who he is. I understand and I lower my gaze. One is not bold in an encounter with a god. Unmindful, he bends to kiss her crooked mouth and I am so close I can see how he twists his own lips to accommodate to hers, to show her that their kiss still works.”
― Richard Selzer, Mortal Lessons: Notes on the Art of Surgery
― Richard Selzer, Mortal Lessons: Notes on the Art of Surgery
“You cannot separate passion from pathology any more than you can separate a person's spirit from his body.”
― Richard Selzer, Letters to a Young Doctor
― Richard Selzer, Letters to a Young Doctor
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