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Paul
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Jan 21, 2019 01:00PM

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I recently read This is Going to Hurt: Secret Diaries of a Junior Doctor after hearing lots of really enthusiastic reviews of it.
I thought it was a very engaging, quick, easy, enjoyable read. Quite a bit of it was laugh out loud funny but it also covers some very sad stories and makes a very serious point about NHS resourcing and the effects it has on both doctors and patients.
The rating for me dropped from I loved it to I really liked it during the second half when I felt that the author was coming across as bitter and the point about his working hours was repeated too often. It’s a very important point and needed to be made, but it had been, I understood the sacrifices he (and his colleagues) had to make. I was angry and frustrated on his behalf. He didn’t need to tell me quite so many times. Although, that had an effect on my enjoyment of the book, it didn’t reduce my respect and sympathy for him and all doctors in that position.

Becky, I loved that book. I laughed, cried, crossed my legs A LOT. I see where you are coming from, but I think that it is just that sheer level of frustration - it's a key message and one that didn't bother me.
Henry Marsh, likewise, in Do No Harm (and I've subsequently listened to him give a lecture) shares the anger and frustration of how he perceives the NHS as an organisation (not its individual practitioners) is losing its main striving purpose.
Recommend it as a read to anyone.
Henry Marsh, likewise, in Do No Harm (and I've subsequently listened to him give a lecture) shares the anger and frustration of how he perceives the NHS as an organisation (not its individual practitioners) is losing its main striving purpose.
Recommend it as a read to anyone.

I think we are extremely lucky to have the NHS but it does have it's problems. Adam Kay did a very good job of shining a light on one of them. An issue that I think most people are probably aware of but don't necessarily take much time to stop and think about.
I think I was enjoying him being the incredibly hard working funny guy so much that it made me notice the tone of bitterness from him in the second half.
The very serious tone of the message at the end of the book was well done I thought. It ended on a note that was very moving and thought provoking.
Paul - you’ll read it in a couple of hours, I flew through it.
On the reading front I have NOT finished, (ie I have given up on) Seven Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle. It was my second attempt - just could not get to grips with it and though I do not like to stop part way through, life is too short and my shelf is groaning with books I really want to read!
On the reading front I have NOT finished, (ie I have given up on) Seven Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle. It was my second attempt - just could not get to grips with it and though I do not like to stop part way through, life is too short and my shelf is groaning with books I really want to read!
Evelyn Hardcastle is definitely a love/hate book
Strangely, I just finished This Is Going to Hurt: Secret Diaries of a Junior Doctor, too! My mother gave it to me, as she didn't like it, and I knew it would be a quick read.
I, too, thought it was very effective on the many problems of the NHS, and the horrific shifts NHS doctors face, and why they choose to do it. Some of the stories were very amusing, too. Aside from the incredibly sad and emotional last diary entry, I felt it was missing a little something, though, maybe it was too straightforward, or sometimes just took the easiest route to a good gag. I don't really feel like it revealed that much about Adam or his fellow doctors as people. However, it was very readable and (at times), fun.
Strangely, I just finished This Is Going to Hurt: Secret Diaries of a Junior Doctor, too! My mother gave it to me, as she didn't like it, and I knew it would be a quick read.
I, too, thought it was very effective on the many problems of the NHS, and the horrific shifts NHS doctors face, and why they choose to do it. Some of the stories were very amusing, too. Aside from the incredibly sad and emotional last diary entry, I felt it was missing a little something, though, maybe it was too straightforward, or sometimes just took the easiest route to a good gag. I don't really feel like it revealed that much about Adam or his fellow doctors as people. However, it was very readable and (at times), fun.

I really enjoyed it. I guess it is a marmite book.
You make a good point about This Is Going to Hurt Lisa. Adam Kay became a comedian, didn't he, so I guess that's why he went for the gags route. At the time I was reading it I was just enjoying the gags but you've made me realise, there really wasn't anything about the doctors as people.
Just finished Home Fire by Kamila Shamsie. It was very, very good, a self-assured and topical read based on Sophocles' Antigone. A very powerful novel.




Just finished The Nocturnal Brain: Nightmares, Neuroscience, and the Secret World of Sleep. It is a really good book of the way our brains still work in the land of nod.

I liked her book on Iceland, Names for the Sea: Strangers in Iceland. The Tidal Zone is not a bad read either


Finished South of the Border, West of the Sun this morning. Really liked it, and had the standard Haruki Murakami tropes that you'd expect...
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Books mentioned in this topic
How to be Both (other topics)South of the Border, West of the Sun (other topics)
The Heart's Invisible Furies (other topics)
Girl Meets Boy (other topics)
The Tidal Zone (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Haruki Murakami (other topics)Sarah Moss (other topics)