Life in Medicine, A: From Aesculapius to Beckett
In his memoir, A Life in Medicine: From Asclepius to Beckett, Eoin O’Brien, a cardiologist with an international reputation as a clinical scientist, recounts his life in medicine and literature. He depicts his relatively privileged upbringing in a medical family in the impoverished city that was post-war Dublin and describes his intensely Catholic schooling in St Conleth’s School and Castleknock College, and his eventual rejection of religion.
O’Brien describes his training in medicine in the Royal College of Surgeons in Dublin and in its teaching hospitals, the Richmond and the Rotunda, with personal vignettes of his teachers and how doctors were trained in the nineteen fifties. Moving to England to specialise as a cardiologist, he recounts, from the unique vantage point of a front-line doctor, the early development of the exciting speciality of cardiology. He was actively involved in the development of coronary care units, in which the then horrendous mortality from heart attack would be reduced with the introduction of new drugs, pacemakers and the techniques of resuscitation and defibrillation.
Back in Dublin, O’Brien describes the practice of medicine in the city, and how he and his colleagues established a research unit that would gain international recognition for the treatment of patients with high blood pressure. He traces his role in many activities, including journalism and recording the history of Dublin’s voluntary hospitals, which were being closed to usher in a new era of hospital care.
O’Brien’s interest in literature brought him into close friendship with many remarkable writers and artists that included Samuel Beckett, Nevill Johnson, Con Leventhal, Edith Fournier, Brian O’Doherty and Niall Sheridan and in the final section, he writes with about these associations, giving unique glimpses into the lives of many remarkable people. His recollections of Samuel Beckett, alone, make this an essential text for those interested in the Nobel Prize-winning writer.
| Weight | 0.400000 |
|---|---|
| ISBN13/Barcode | 9781843518686 |
| ISBN10 | 1843518686 |
| Author | Eoin O'Brien |
| Binding | Paperback |
|---|---|
| Date Published | 15th June 2023 |
| Pages | 212 |
| Publisher | Lilliput Press Ltd |
In his memoir, A Life in Medicine: From Asclepius to Beckett, Eoin O’Brien, a cardiologist with an international reputation as a clinical scientist, recounts his life in medicine and literature. He depicts his relatively privileged upbringing in a medical family in the impoverished city that was post-war Dublin and describes his intensely Catholic schooling in St Conleth’s School and Castleknock College, and his eventual rejection of religion.
O’Brien describes his training in medicine in the Royal College of Surgeons in Dublin and in its teaching hospitals, the Richmond and the Rotunda, with personal vignettes of his teachers and how doctors were trained in the nineteen fifties. Moving to England to specialise as a cardiologist, he recounts, from the unique vantage point of a front-line doctor, the early development of the exciting speciality of cardiology. He was actively involved in the development of coronary care units, in which the then horrendous mortality from heart attack would be reduced with the introduction of new drugs, pacemakers and the techniques of resuscitation and defibrillation.
Back in Dublin, O’Brien describes the practice of medicine in the city, and how he and his colleagues established a research unit that would gain international recognition for the treatment of patients with high blood pressure. He traces his role in many activities, including journalism and recording the history of Dublin’s voluntary hospitals, which were being closed to usher in a new era of hospital care.
O’Brien’s interest in literature brought him into close friendship with many remarkable writers and artists that included Samuel Beckett, Nevill Johnson, Con Leventhal, Edith Fournier, Brian O’Doherty and Niall Sheridan and in the final section, he writes with about these associations, giving unique glimpses into the lives of many remarkable people. His recollections of Samuel Beckett, alone, make this an essential text for those interested in the Nobel Prize-winning writer.
Praise for the book
‘In this splendid memoir Eoin O’Brien recuperates a vanished world … The record here of a life and the times in which it was lived is a rich and varied tapestry … It is to Beckett that Professor O’Brien’s final chapter is devoted…These pages are suffused with a fondness and warmth that emanated from both sides of the friendship … This is a fascinating, affecting and oddly bracing memoir.’ – John Banville, Foreword
‘When you meet Eoin O’Brien you are immediately aware that you are in the presence of a brilliant scientific mind – but more than that, his natural curiosity and his warm open-mindedness keep leading him from his profoundly important field of medicine into the vast, creative worlds of literature and the visual arts. And, for me personally, his passages dealing with his friendship with the great Samuel Beckett are the jewel in the crown of this splendid book.’ – Desmond Morris, author of The Naked Ape
About the Author
Eoin O’Brien, who has held professorial positions at both the Royal College of Surgeons and at University College Dublin, is author of several highly regarded volumes: among them, The Beckett Country: Samuel Beckett’s Ireland, Conscience and Conflict: A Biography of Sir Dominic Corrigan, 1802–1880, and A Portrait of Irish Medicine: an Illustrated History of Medicine in Ireland. He also co-edited Ethna MacCarthy: Poems with Gerald Dawe (Lilliput, 2019).