Book details
Cutting for Stone
by Abraham Verghese
2009
About the book
The story follows twin brothers Marion and Shiva Stone, born from a clandestine union between an Indian nun and a British surgeon in an Addis Ababa mission hospital. Set against the backdrop of mid-century Ethiopian political upheaval, the narrative details their shared childhood and eventual estrangement within the high-stakes world of operative medicine. Verghese emphasizes technical clinical realities, documenting the visceral details of fistula repair, liver transplants, and the anatomical precision required in the theater. As Marion flees revolution for a residency in New York, the plot links their personal betrayal to the mechanical challenges of saving lives.
Readers interested in the intersection of clinical pathology and human history will find a meticulous depiction of the physician's craft. The book appeals to those who value technical accuracy in fiction, providing a clear view of how surgical innovation and hospital hierarchy function under resource scarcity. One exits the text with a functional understanding of internal medicine and the specific physical toll of generational secrets. It serves as a study of how biological trauma and surgical intervention dictate the path of a family over several decades.
Details
- Published
- 2009
- Language
- EN