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La Maison du Seigneur

Cette série plonge dans la réalité brute de la formation médicale, où de jeunes internes sont confrontés à des heures épuisantes et à des décisions immédiates engageant la vie ou la mort. Avec une honnêteté sans concession et un humour noir, elle dépeint les parcours exigeants nécessaires pour devenir médecin. Elle explore non seulement les compétences médicales, mais aussi les profondes transformations humaines et les dilemmes éthiques inhérents à la profession. Un jalon de la fiction médicale sans fard, elle a captivé les lecteurs par son authenticité brutale.

Mount Misery
The House of God
The Spirit of the Place

Ordre de lecture recommandé

  1. 1

    By turns heartbreaking, hilarious, and utterly human, The House of God is a mesmerizing and provocative novel about what it really takes to become a doctor. “The raunchy, troubling, and hilarious novel that turned into a cult phenomenon. Singularly compelling…brutally honest.”—The New York Times Struggling with grueling hours and sudden life-and-death responsibilities, Basch and his colleagues, under the leadership of their rule-breaking senior resident known only as the Fat Man, must learn not only how to be fine doctors but, eventually, good human beings. A phenomenon ever since it was published, The House of God was the first unvarnished, unglorified, and uncensored portrait of what training to become a doctor is truly like, in all its terror, exhaustion and black comedy. With more than two million copies sold worldwide, it has been hailed as one of the most important medical novels ever written. With an introduction by John Updike

    The House of God
  2. 2
  3. 3

    From the bestselling author of the The House of God comes an ambitious novel about the complicated relationships between mothers and sons, doctors and patients, the past and the present, and love and death... Settled into a relationship with an Italian yoga instructor and working in Europe, Dr. Orville Rose's peace is shaken by his mother's death. On his return to Columbia, a Hudson River town of quirky people and “plagued by breakage,” he learns that his mother has willed him a large sum of money, her 1981 Chrysler, and her Victorian house in the center of town. There's one odd catch: he must live in her house for one year and thirteen days. As he struggles with his decision—to stay and meet the terms of the will or return to his life in Italy—Orville reconnects with family, reunites with former friends, and comes to terms with old rivals and bitter memories. In the process he’ll discover his own history, as well as his mother’s, and finally learn what it really means to be a healer, and to be healed.

    The Spirit of the Place