The author of Dr. Frau: A Woman Doctor Among the Amish continues her wonderful reminiscences. This time she includes the accident which paralyzes her professional life. Interwoven with the story of her personal struggle are stories of patients who come to see her when she is a patient-- and the memories of delivering babies, battling snowstorms, heartbreak, and joy. "This is a can't-put-it-down book." -- Bookends "She exhibits the heart and mind of a poet in her vivid descriptions and colorful similes . . . Readers will enjoy this well-written account of life as a country doctor and as a patient with the uncertainties of physical therapy." -- Mennonite Weekly Review
Detour follows the story of Dr. Grace Kaiser after a terrible fall one summer in Pennsylvania. Detailing life as a quadriplegic, there is still hope for Grace to regain some mobility, as her spine was not completely severed. In between accounts of physical therapy and facing a new reality, Grace recalls memories of her days as a woman doctor among the Amish and the highly unique experiences she had playing such an important role in her community.
This is an amazing book and it taught me just how precious life is. I would recommend this to anyone.
The stories are good. This is a continuation of Dr. Frau, and tells the story of Dr. Kaiser's freak accident that left her with permanent spinal cord and mobility issues. Once again, here is a book that suffers from lack of a good editor. I don't look for errors but cannot help but see when there are multiple ones. Also, Kaiser is very fond of overwrought similes, which were present in both books. The reader is moving along through the book, enjoying the prose stories of her recovery and flashbacks to her days of delivering babies - and then comes something like "The [hospital] gowns dangled from my shoulders like windless sails flapping the yardarms of an ancient ship." Other descriptions were equally overwritten: "That applejack wore fingers of golden satin as it slid across my tongue." When an author's word choices are overly dramatic, they detract from the message.