Victoria Sweet's new book, SLOW MEDICINE, is on sale now For readers of Paul Kalanithi's
When Breath Becomes Air, a medical "page-turner" that traces one doctor's "remarkable journey to the essence of medicine" (
The San Francisco Chronicle).
San Francisco's Laguna Honda Hospital is the last almshouse in the country, a descendant of the H tel-Dieu (God's hotel) that cared for the sick in the Middle Ages. Ballet dancers and rock musicians, professors and thieves--"anyone who had fallen, or, often, leapt, onto hard times" and needed extended medical care--ended up here. So did Victoria Sweet, who came for two months and stayed for twenty years.
Laguna Honda, relatively low-tech but human-paced, gave Sweet the opportunity to practice a kind of attentive medicine that has almost vanished. Gradually, the place transformed the way she understood her work. Alongside the modern view of the body as a machine to be fixed, her extraordinary patients evoked an older idea, of the body as a garden to be tended. God's Hotel tells their story and the story of the hospital itself, which, as efficiency experts, politicians, and architects descended, determined to turn it into a modern "health care facility," revealed its own surprising truths about the essence, cost, and value of caring for the body and the soul.
Binding Type: Paperback
Publisher: Riverhead Books
Published: 04/02/2013
ISBN: 9781594486548
Pages: 432
Weight: 0.70lbs
Size: 8.10h x 5.40w x 1.00d
Review Citations: Christian Century 05/01/2013 pg. 49
Books & Culture 07/01/2013 pg. 9