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By the time most of us meet our doctors, they've been in practice
for a number of years. Often they seem aloof, uncaring, and
hurried. Of course, they're not all like that, and most didn't
start out that way.
Here are voices of third-year students just as they begin to take
on clinical responsibilities. Their words focus on the odd
transition students face when they must deal with real people in
real time and in real crises and when they must learn to put aside
their emotions to make quick, accurate, and sensitive decisions.
Their decisions aren't always right, and the consequences can be
life-altering--for all involved. Moving, disturbing, and candid,
their true stories show us a side of the profession that few ever
see, or could even imagine. They show, often painfully, how medical
students grow up, right at the bedside.
Winner of the 2014 John Carroll Award, presented annually by The
Little Big Horn Associates, as their Literary Award for the best
book/monograph during the preceding year. Winner 2014 G. Joseph
Sills Jr. Book Award This remarkable book synthesizes a lifetime of
in-depth research into one of America's most storied disasters, the
defeat of Custer's 7th Cavalry at Little Horn at the hands of the
Sioux and Cheyenne Indians, as well as the complete annihilation of
that part of the cavalry led by Custer himself. The author, Gordon
Harper, spent countless hours on the battlefield itself as well as
researching every iota of evidence of the fight from both sides,
white and Indian. He was thus able to recreate every step of the
battle as authoritatively as anyone could, dispelling myths and
falsehoods along the way. One of his first observations is that the
fight of June 25-26, 1876 took place along the Little Horn
River-its junction with the Big Horn was several miles away so that
the term for the battle, "Little Big Horn" has always been a
misnomer. He precisely traces the mysterious activities of
Benteen's battalion on that fateful day, and why it could never
come to Custer's reinforcement. He describes Reno's desperate fight
in unprecedented depth, as well as how that unnerved officer
benefited from the unexpected heroism of many of his men. Indian
accounts, ever-present throughout this book, come to the fore
especially during Custer's part of the fight, because no white
soldier survived it. However, analysis of the forensic
evidence-tracking cartridges, bullets, etc., discovered on the
battlefield-plus the locations of bodies assist in drawing an
accurate scenario of how the final scene unfolded. It may indeed be
clearer now than it was to the doomed 7th Cavalrymen at the time,
who through the dust and smoke and Indians seeming to rise by
hundreds from the ground, only gradually realized the extent of the
disaster. Of additional interest is the narrative of the
battlefield after the fight, when successive burial teams had to be
dispatched for the gruesome task, because prior ones invariably did
a poor job. Harper himself passed away in 2009, leaving behind
nearly two million words of original research and writing. In this
book his work has been condensed by historians Gordon RIchard and
Monte Akers to present his key findings and the crux of his
narrative on the exact course of the battle.
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