276°
Posted 20 hours ago

A Fortunate Woman: A Country Doctor’s Story - The Top Ten Bestseller, Shortlisted for the Baillie Gifford Prize

£8.495£16.99Clearance
ZTS2023's avatar
Shared by
ZTS2023
Joined in 2023
82
63

About this deal

I laughed out loud at several scenes, and wiped away tears at others; this evoked human drama and life’s ebbs and flow in all its complexity, bound up by a love for the wild surroundings of the valley practice, haunted and inspired by the original book (and GP) on which this is based: “A Fortunate Man.” An immersive study… Morland’s book contains a profound message for the future at a critical moment for general practice and us all. Times Literary Supplement

A Fortunate Woman by Polly Morland | Book review | The TLS A Fortunate Woman by Polly Morland | Book review | The TLS

Polly Morland’s A Fortunate Woman, however, is a totally different and in my humble opinion a much better book and inspirational for all the right reasons. At a time of a barrage of negative publicity directed towards GPs, it is a book that reveals the positive impact that a caring GP has on the lives of their patients. The GP in A Fortunate Woman works hard, but she also understands the need for self-care. She has a supportive team behind her, both at work and home, she is reflective, in touch with nature and the landscape (beautifully depicted in the book, both in words and pictures) and through walking, she reaps the therapeutic benefits of exercise and fresh air. Work gives her meaning, but she has balance. Rachel Rutter near her practice in Stroud. ‘For a long time now, we have in essence been firefighting the daily triage list.’ Photograph: Gareth Iwan Jones/The ObserverRevisiting Berger’s story after half a century of seismic change, both in our society and in the ways in which medicine is practised , A Fortunate Woman sheds light on what it means to be a doctor in today’s complex and challenging world. Interweaving the doctor’s story with those of her patients, reflecting on the relationship between landscape and community, and upon the wider role of medicine in society, a unique portrait of a twenty-first century family doctor emerges. This is not your average "health worker" memoir, it is so much more. It is a meditation on place, belonging, nature and history. Even before the pandemic, doctor-patient relationships were in serious trouble. A mobile population, a shortage of doctors, overwhelming workloads, the move towards part-time working (for many GPs, the only way to endure the pressures of the job), bigger practices, larger teams: all of this gnawed away at the humanity of primary care. Meanwhile, the rise of evidence-based medicine has seen a shift towards the management of health risk via a playbook of standardised interventions. While this has driven progress in the treatment of many illnesses, it’s had unintended consequences for the relationship between GPs and their patients. Precisely because the value of those relationships is difficult to render in cold, hard figures, performance metrics are skewed towards outcomes that are easier to quantify. The emphasis, and indeed the measure of success, has shifted from the individual patient to the disease. If the title seems familiar to you, it is because it is inspired by the book A Fortunate Man. Written by John Berger this book blended text and photographs to tell the story of a country GP named John Sassall working in the same valley in the Forest of Dean in the 1960s. Long considered a medical classic, students and trainees have been encouraged to read it ever since and it is said to have inspired many doctors into General Practice, including the GP in A Fortunate Woman. Guilty confession: I didn’t like it. Sassall’s evolution in the book from a narrow-minded surgeon intolerant of minor complaints to holistic, patient-centred GP is revealing but I found the prose dense, the philosophical allusions opaque and Sassall as a character obsessive, dogmatic and at times unlikeable. It’s the boiling frog analogy,” Hodges says. “The water’s not been comfortable for a decade, but it’s now very noticeably warmer. It will soon reach a threshold where there is a collapse.”

A Fortunate Woman by Polly Morland review — doing the rounds A Fortunate Woman by Polly Morland review — doing the rounds

It was not that she was out of the ordinary’writes Polly Morland near the start of her compelling and beautifully written book A Fortunate Woman, ‘ Put simply, she is a doctor who knows her patients. She is the keeper of their stories, over years and across generations, witness to the infinite variety of their lives. These stories, she says, are what her job is all about. They are what sustain her, even in days as hard as these.’

Wendy Moore, TLS Polly Morland is a journalist and film-maker with a kindly, dramatic writing style and a feel for the human story . . . This book deepens our understanding of the life and thoughts of a modern doctor, and the modern NHS, and it expands movingly to chronicle a community and a landscape – “the valley” itself is a defining feature of people’s lives. Superb – beautiful, enthralling, careful, tender. It is not just a portrait of the doctor and all those she serves, but a memoir of an entire English community, timeless and revelatory. I found it deeply moral, moving, lucid, and loving. Laura Cumming, author of On Chapel Sands

Asda Great Deal

Free UK shipping. 15 day free returns.
Community Updates
*So you can easily identify outgoing links on our site, we've marked them with an "*" symbol. Links on our site are monetised, but this never affects which deals get posted. Find more info in our FAQs and About Us page.
New Comment