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Joe Connelly (1)

Auteur van Bringing Out the Dead: A Novel

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6 Werken 494 Leden 8 Besprekingen

Werken van Joe Connelly

Bringing Out the Dead: A Novel (1998) 435 exemplaren
Crumbtown (2003) 50 exemplaren
Under Papa's Picture (1975) 3 exemplaren
救命士 (2000) 3 exemplaren
Zeuge des Todes. (1999) 2 exemplaren
Major Payne 1 exemplaar

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Unrelenting and unstoppable - like an ambulance barreling through Hell's Kitchen driven by drunken medics. And yet, it somehow manages to touch on the depths of the human condition, the madness of the city, and the horrors of a life being surrounded by constant death. A brutally fantastic book.
½
 
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Zonnywhoop | 6 andere besprekingen | Oct 24, 2015 |
A great first chapter or so - Connelly has a knack for the over-the-top satirical descriptions of Crumbtown itself. It's only when creating characters or plotting that he falls down. Well, that's kind of important. Some of the characters are ludicrous enough to fit into the broad sort of reality-TV satire he's aiming for, but almost all of them are wasted on a plot that can't help but feel dated that, despite its fast pace, just feels like such a slog. It goes too far to be believable but doesn't go far enough to be actually as funny as it should. Disappointing. Seeing as it's been 9 years since this came out, it looks like Connelly was a one book wonder with Bringing Out the Dead.… (meer)
 
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eswnr | Feb 20, 2012 |
This is a work of fiction. Works of fiction have at their disposal poetic license. This author makes the most of that opportunity and establishes multiple themes to explore. The EMTs deal with people who are "dancing with the devil" (p. 144). Sometimes people can be saved, sometimes they cannot. Eventually those ghosts come to reside in the memories and conscious lives of those who are present to witness these seemingly interminable crisis situations. The veneer of religiosity can be deferred to but ultimately the St Christopher medals and Madonna miniature figurines adorning pizza are but signposts to youthful memories and can guarantee nothing for future days. As good luck charms, they are capricious or ambivalent. Frank Pierce at last comes to some closure about his inability to save people. If he does not save all of his ambulance calls, consciously intending to do so from the start, has he unconsciously been guilty of playing a part in their deaths? With no clear absolute method of discerning an answer he concludes the answer must be 'yes'. The EMT Pierce condemns himself as guilty (p. 192) and early on in the book the only reason for saving the select few fortunate ones is that they "give us time and space to forget we are condemned" (p. 153). The culmination of the narrative is that a life sustaining answer cannot be matter-of-fact. The memories of people and their ghosts are as real as Pierce is. He must make peace with them. There must arise a spiritual Pierce who can coexist with these ghostly memories and not solely be haunted by them. On the road to this acceptance Pierce says that he too "is dying but not dead" (p.123). There is a commonality he shares with the voices he hears and the apparitions he sees even though they are alternated by his ex Mona and the dead girl Rose. The fight with partner Tom makes it clear that Pierce must strike a blow that will do some permanent damage to Death or seek to avoid the confrontation altogether (p. 83). An EMT cannot kill Death even if he or she saves lives momentarily. The EMT must come to a working agreement that allows some rest from torment by hypothetical lifesaving variants. The book ends with a metaphysical awareness by Pierce of his own death and that his life has been lived in pursuit of something meaningful. Pierce, who was raised Catholic, ends knowing that he never could have saved the rain-coated Rose. But, by not forgetting her short life, he yearns to be forgiven (for not saving her) and hopes that as long as he remembers her, he will be. This is a work of fiction which offers so much about the universal truths of medical care. I am glad Connelly chose to communicate about the lives that are touched by illness and death as well as the small dedicated groups who try to use technological skill to restore what is able to be restored.… (meer)
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sacredheart25 | 6 andere besprekingen | Aug 29, 2010 |
This is an impressive and strong debut work. Although the book came out in 1998, I took a chance on it because its description seemed somewhat interesting. I’d never have picked up this book from its cover alone. The serious eyes staring through a cross on a dark red background looked too much like a murder mystery. When I actually got the book and started reading, however, it exploded for me.

The author was a medic for nine years in New York City. His novel is about Frank, a medic in the mean and frightening neighborhood of Hell's Kitchen in New York City. The book teems with vibrant people and situations and experiences the adrenaline-filled lives of medics at work, all of which is punctuated with delightful dark humor.

Frank makes a most believable lead character. Anyone who has worked in the health field knows the ghosts (literally and figuratively) that surround those who deal with life and death on a daily basis. This comes across well as flashes of some situations never leave Frank’s mind. Feeling burnt out by his job, yet getting a rush from it, he pushes to do the best he can for everyone he treats. Sadly, though, he sometime doesn’t treat himself so well.

I highly recommend this book which provides a meaningful peek into a medic’s life.
… (meer)
½
 
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SqueakyChu | 6 andere besprekingen | Nov 6, 2009 |

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Werken
6
Leden
494
Populariteit
#50,038
Waardering
½ 3.7
Besprekingen
8
ISBNs
35
Talen
4

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