A beautifully told memoir by a nurse whose patients and family help her to a clearer understanding of the human condition.
Molly Case is a spoken word artist, writer and nurse born and brought up in south London. She currently works at St George's Hospital, London as a cardiac nurse specialist. In April 2013 she achieved national recognition after performing her poem 'Nursing the Nation' at the Royal College of Nursing. Molly has appeared in the Guardian, the Independent, the Times, Elle magazine and Huffington Post, and was named in the Health Service Journal's Inspirational Women list and the BBC's 100 Women list.
Case's empathy and compassion are everywhere evident in this
beautifully written narrative
*Sunday Times*
Written with a poet's ear for language and a nurse's compassionate
heart. It will make you cry, and it will buoy your faith in
humanity
*Stylist*
This fascinating and erudite book takes us through one woman's
lovely relationship with her father interspersed with poignant and
searing tales from the world of the nurse, as these two worlds move
towards an emotional collision. Molly has treated us to a book that
gets to the heart (literally) of a nurse's life. As well as being
informative, moving and so interesting, it is a bloody good read.
Anyone who needs any more convincing that the NHS is our most
invaluable asset will find that many times over within the pages of
this book
*Jo Brand*
Beautifully written and passionate tales from the nurse you would
choose for yourself
Poetic and compassionate, offering a joyous celebration of life
*Sunday Times best memoirs of 2019*
Molly Case reminds us that humanity and moments of true care are as
healing as the medicine modern science can deliver
The tandem stories of Case as nurse and daughter exert the pull of
a novel through pages threaded with philosophy and history, ethics
and etymology
*Sunday Telegraph*
Case's book will restore your faith . . . She illuminates the
fascinating and never-ending loop of care in a hospital
*New York Times*
What differentiates How to Treat People from other cracking doctor
and nurse memoirs already out there is Case's youth and her
outstanding use of language. Her charm is her generation's charm:
open, loving, bold, inquisitive, caring. May she inspire her
contemporaries to join her in a vital job
*The Times*
The moments of empathy and kindness in extreme, tragic situations
form the focal point of Case's book, which weaves together science
and storytelling
*Red Magazine*
A profound reflection on the way we live and die
*Bookseller*
Intense, powerful, moving and very enlightening on what it means to
be a nurse. I loved its endless curiosity about the language of
medicine and the practice of care. It seemed infused with a love
and respect for the profession itself
How to Treat People gets to the heart of who we are - how we live
and also how we die. I was moved twice over - by the work Molly
does as a nurse every day, and by the book she has written
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