
The Beauty in Breaking A Memoir
Reviews

My best friend Grace gifted me this book for my birthday (with annotations and everything) and reading it really truly healed me. I can’t really put into words the peace and wisdom that this book really delivered but I would recommend this book to frankly anyone who is going through a difficult time.

It was decent. I thought it was about a oryho surgon so disepoinyed for that

Stories of Dr Harper’s upbringing are interwoven with stories of her patients. A dedicated ER physician, Dr Harper knows what it is like to be lonely, scared, and alone. I imagine she is a balm to those patients she meets in the ER.

While obviously the author’s stories and those of her patients are valid and deserving to be told, I honestly just couldn’t connect with the author or the tone of her writing, so not my favorite.

I was hesitant to start this book because I worried it would be full of dense, incomprehensible medical jargon; while the book does contain jargon of a medical nature, it was still a very accessible read. Dr. Harper touches on a lot of thought-provoking aspects of being a healthcare provider, such as taking on responsibilities that are not in your job description and knowing when to ask follow up questions and when to keep silent when evaluating a patient's health. If you're worried this book will be dense, don't. It's really a very touching and personal account of what it's like to work in a hospital for years.


















