Get Free Shipping on orders over $79
Something Awesome : A Life in Neurosurgery - William A. Friedman

Something Awesome

A Life in Neurosurgery

By: William A. Friedman

Paperback | 12 January 2021

At a Glance

Paperback


RRP $32.99

$32.75

or 4 interest-free payments of $8.19 with

 or 

Ships in 5 to 10 business days

Dr. Friedman shares his life as a neurosurgeon, recounting the exhilarating, challenging, and life-and-death experiences along the way, the people that shaped his life, and insights for readers concerning neurological conditions, the healthcare system, and the important things in life.

An illuminating account of a brilliant neurosurgical career.
—Henry Marsh, MD, New York Times bestselling author of Do No Harm


In this medical memoir, Dr. Friedman recounts the humorous, tragic, and always intense relationships of neurosurgeons to their colleagues and patients. He details what it takes to become a leading neurosurgeon and deal with deadly brain diseases and their devastating complications. He weighs in on universal health care in the United States. He also answers such questions as how does the mind work, why is trigeminal neuralgia called the suicide disease, and how will we ultimately cure cancer of the brain? Through his exhilarating and challenging experiences, Dr. Friedman shares his lifelong journey, one that has truly been something awesome.
Industry Reviews
"Bill Friedman bares his soul and gives five decades worth of insight into the thoughts, emotions, compassion, and vulnerabilities of a leading neurosurgeon and accomplished department chair. His reflections ring true for us physicians who devote our lives to taking care of our patients through high points and tragedies and failures. Something Awesome is a must-read-not only a memoir about neurosurgery, but an insightful commentary on life and humanity."
- Brian Hoh, MD, MBA, President of the Congress of Neurological Surgeons

"Through fascinating storytelling, Dr. Friedman takes us inside the world of medicine and neurosurgery, inside the operating room, inside the brain, inside the grueling training process, and inside the minds of those who choose this challenging and often heart-wrenching field. Medicine at its best is a fine balance of art and science. Likewise, Dr. Friedman's narration strikes an illuminating balance between the science of neurological disease and its impact on human lives."
- David Guzick, MD, PhD, Past President of University of Florida Health

"A doctor reflects on medicine and the human drama underlying it in this heartfelt memoir.

Friedman recaps his 44-year career as a neurosurgeon, including a long tenure as the chairman of the department of neurosurgery at the University of Florida, in loose, episodic chapters full of reminiscences, medical lore, case studies, policy briefs, and philosophical musings. Among the grab bag are his recollections of confusion, anxiety, and sleep deprivation as a resident; detailed descriptions of surgical procedures; a poignant elegy on his mother's decline and death from a brain tumor; explanations of his groundbreaking research into using electrical monitoring of neural activity to guide neurosurgeons; a sharp critique of American health care, which he calls a "disgrace" for its high cost, poor quality, and lack of universal coverage; a look at his own efforts to improve quality in his neurosurgery department with checklists and meticulous teamwork; a lengthy account of the assassination of Abraham Lincoln, complete with the autopsy report; and a plangent chapter authored by his colleague Jobyna Whiting recounting an incident in which she treated a doomed victim of an auto accident and the shame-ridden man who killed her. Friedman's narrative is a bit of a ramble, but his workmanlike prose and lucid discussions of complex medical issues make the many digressions a pleasure to follow. Personal relationships are central to his portrait of doctoring: He's warmly appreciative of supportive teachers and mentors-and critical of the "impatience" and "cruelty" of others-and conveys both the camaraderie of medical practice and the occasional eruptions of poisonous office politics, including bogus allegations of financial misconduct leveled at him by an underperforming surgeon he tried to fire. He's at his best in describing the emotional turmoil that besets every doctor amid the vagaries of life and death. ("A woman with everything to live for had come to me for help and, instead, had died...And thus began the process that occurs every time I have a bad result: relentless self-doubt and self-loathing. You veer into imposter syndrome where, for a time, you believe that you're not really a good neurosurgeon, that you are entirely unworthy.") The result is a frank, revealing view of a doctor's experience.

An intimate, insightful meditation on the science, art, and business of healing."
- Kirkus Review

More in Science, Technology & Medicine Biographies

Death of an Ordinary Man - Sarah Perry

RRP $36.99

$29.75

20%
OFF
Elon Musk - Walter Isaacson

Paperback

RRP $29.99

$24.99

17%
OFF
Ernest Rutherford and the Birth of Modern Physics - Matthew Wright
Brainstorm : 2025 ABIA Social Impact Book of the Year - Richard Scolyer
Great Australian Outback Nurses Stories - Bill Marsh

RRP $34.99

$28.75

18%
OFF
How To Change Your Mind : New Science of Psychedelics - Michael Pollan
Empire of Pain : The Secret History of the Sackler Dynasty - Patrick Radden Keefe
With the End in Mind : Dying, Death and Wisdom in an Age of Denial - Kathryn Mannix
Nature's Last Dance : Tales of wonder in an age of extinction - Natalie Kyriacou
This is Going to Hurt : Secret Diaries of a Junior Doctor - Adam Kay
Being Mortal : Illness, Medicine and What Matters in the End - Atul Gawande
An Astronaut's Guide to Life on Earth - Chris Hadfield

RRP $24.99

$21.75

13%
OFF
Frog : The secret diary of a paramedic - Sally Gould

RRP $36.99

$29.75

20%
OFF
No Time for Makeup : The life of a flying doctor and paediatrician - Elizabeth Green
Longitude - Dava Sobel

Paperback

RRP $22.99

$20.75

10%
OFF