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9+ Werken 497 Leden 22 Besprekingen

Werken van J. C. Hallman

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The Best American Travel Writing 2010 (2010) — Medewerker — 100 exemplaren

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Algemene kennis

Geboortedatum
1967-05-09
Geslacht
male
Nationaliteit
USA
Woonplaatsen
California, USA
New Jersey, USA
St. Paul, Minnesota, USA
Opleiding
University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine
Iowa Writers' Workshop
Korte biografie
J.C. Hallman grew up in Southern California on a street called Utopia Road. He studied creative writing at the University of Pittsburgh, the Writing Seminars at Johns Hopkins, and the Iowa Writers’ Workshop. Hallman’s MFA thesis was titled “Utopia Road,” which was the name of a story later published in Hallman’s short story collection, The Hospital for Bad Poets.

Hallman’s nonfiction combines memoir, history, journalism, and travelogue, and has been compared to Alain de Botton and Bruce Chatwin. His first book, The Chess Artist, tells the story of Hallman’s friendship with chess player Glenn Umstead. His second, The Devil is a Gentleman, is an intellectual apprenticeship with philosopher William James. Hallman eventually realized that “Utopia Road” had exhausted neither his utopian heritage nor his interest and he wrote his third book of nonfiction, In Utopia, which explores the history of utopian thought and literature in the context of visits to six modern utopias in various stages of realization.

Hallman has also edited an anthology, The Story About the Story, which proposes a new school of literary response – “creative criticism.”

Hallman has taught at a number of colleges and universities. He currently lives in St. Paul, Minnesota.

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Deze bespreking is geschreven voor LibraryThing Vroege Recensenten.
I'm afraid the ARC version was slow and painful to read, due to the medical horrors of the subject and because it was poorly organized. When I finally finished it after seven months, I read through the intro again - which had excited me in the first place, since Hallman said he was aiming to increase the amount known about Anarcha herself and not focusing on Sims... and in the ARC, at least, he failed at that goal. I could not tell if he forgot that plan or if he just did not have enough information about her and over-promised. He did not glorify Sims, he portrays Sims as a fairly terrible and arrogant man, but he did not focus on Anarcha even remotely as much as he'd said he would. I have no interest in reading the released version to see if it's better - or in reading anything more from Hallman.… (meer)
 
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Alarine | 13 andere besprekingen | Mar 30, 2024 |
super interesting history and bringing to light (with what had to be an incredible amount of research) the past in both a readable and interesting way, but also a way that really delves into the truth of the time and the lie that history has perpetuated. an important book to set the record straight.

i'm ashamed that something as obvious as this never occurred to me: "There were bigger plantations, however, older plantations where the making and selling of babies was no different from, or was maybe more profitable than the growing of cotton or sugar."… (meer)
½
 
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overlycriticalelisa | 13 andere besprekingen | Jan 18, 2024 |
Deze bespreking is geschreven voor LibraryThing Vroege Recensenten.
I have been a medical librarian for over fifteen years and have always been fascinated by medical history. I was pleased to be given an advance reader's edition of SAY ANARCHA as a review book for LibraryThing. It is obvious that a lot of work and research has gone into collecting information for this book standing at 422 pages. It is also obvious that the author was passionate about his topic. What I found lacking was organization of the information which led to me putting the book down several times and making myself return to read more after long absences. I decided to scan through the book but again found myself lost from the details and had to go back and read page by page to have any understanding of the progression of information. -- The book would have been much more engaging if it had been grouped in cohesive chapters -- the state of early medicine -- slave culture in the southern states -- slave medicine -- Dr. Sims -- Anarcha -- even a chapter on natural events for Halley's Comet and the night The Stars Fell on Alabama. I was glad that Anarcha was found and given her part in women's medical history -- but I think she was lost again among the ramblings that I'm not sure really helped the book.There are times that I'm left wandering, "What has that got to do with the story of Anarcha?" Even a few things that proved later to be part of the story could have been shortened down from several pages to a few paragraphs.
I still want to know the rest of Anarcha's story and may pick it up again. But the topic may not be suitable for everyone -- the world of the slave is one of a commodity and it shows a hard, cruel treatment which crosses the border into horror and torture. Even Anarcha realizes very early in her life that she is not a person but a thing. Dr. Sims is described as an American Mengele performing experimental surgeries in his backyard "Negro Hospital" using enslaved women without anesthesia. The book could benefit from an index of topics. There are some illustrations and images from old documents -- some are fuzzy and hard to make out. Topics: Medical History, Women's History, Research, Biography, Slaves
… (meer)
 
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pjburnswriter | 13 andere besprekingen | Oct 30, 2023 |
Deze bespreking is geschreven voor LibraryThing Vroege Recensenten.
I have mixed feelings about this book because there were so many threads and tangents it was hard to discern an arc to the story. The author cites that is speculative nonfiction necessitated by the fact that Anarcha (or Annacay?) was a slave and could not write to leave any personal historical account. It's clear the author did a lot of research to track down the stories of J. Marion Sims as well as Anarcha, but as I was reading an ARC there was no bibliography or end notes and only indistinct photo copies of materials the author came across during his research.

What I learned from reading this book:
- There are graphic and horrible descriptions of the state of slavery in South Carolina and Alabama in the 1830's up until the Civil War.
- More graphic descriptions of difficult births with macabre medical attempts to deal with them.
- Granular detail of J. Marion Sims' life. Including his shameless self promotion as he sought wealth and fame without much regard for treating patients, mostly women and slaves, humanely and with dignity.
- Speculations about Anarcha's thoughts, feelings, and reactions to her own condition and that of her cohort.

The narrative is rambling and circles back on itself. The author includes a lot of detail about the teachers and associates of J. Marion Sims that reinforce the dominance of wealthy white males in medicine, their petty jealousies and rivalries, and their contempt of slaves and women. Beyond that, what is the point of including all these people?
I'm also not sure what the point was including the celestial events (meteor showers & a comet) in the narrative, the author doesn't make that clear.

In summary, this book could have used some tighter editing to create a story arc and clearly define what the author wants us to know and understand.

By far the most interesting part to me is the afterward in which the author describes the current efforts to prevent and treat obstetric fistula in African countries.
… (meer)
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tangledthread | 13 andere besprekingen | Jul 4, 2023 |

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Statistieken

Werken
9
Ook door
1
Leden
497
Populariteit
#49,748
Waardering
½ 3.6
Besprekingen
22
ISBNs
20

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