Tuesday, December 21, 2010

Critical Care: A New Nurse Faces Death, Life, and Everything in Between


Author:  Theresa Brown

I enjoyed this book quite a bit. It surprised me, pleasantly, in many ways. It let me down only in that it ended too soon.

When I first picked up this book, I expected the author to merely parade grisly experiences before me, making me thankful for my civilian life and giving me a new-found awe for those who can handle this most difficult profession. I wasn't really expecting much in the way of wording or decorum. When I read that brown is a former professor who taught at prestigious Tufts University, I assumed she left because she couldn't hack it. Instead, I saw how a natural, easy talent for words created an aura around the narrative, giving the book a shimmer of sophisticated prose. The words rarely got in the way of the story-telling, except in instances of her penchant for overusing certain words (savvy is a major offender). In a way, I think her teaching didn't serve as much a a previous life before she chose nursing as much as a primer to share her story and transcending messages. She knits stories together through time into a storyline more than merely a timeline. She shares her lessons but does not preach. These are the earmarks of genuinely good storytelling. The details she chooses are meaningful, interesting.

Just as important as what she tells and how is what she has omitted. I admired her strength while reading about her accident and return to duty, afraid the accident would cost her the dream. I would have been disappointed to see the book turn selfishly to cover the minutiae of her recovery, the physical therapy sessions, the grim expressions on her doctors' faces when they tell her of the severity of her accident like a cheap TV movie. I was also glad to see her home life stayed in the background, giving patients and work their rightful amount of spotlight.

In my personal life, I seek experiences to write about to relay to others. This book showed me how to do that the proper way to approach this. For that reason, this was a valuable read. 


Overall Rating:  4 of 5 Stars

Wednesday, December 1, 2010

Pumpkin Chocolate Chip Cookies

Pumpkins at a Starlight, IN, orchard.


As the holidays draw nearer, I develop a strange urge to bake... and bake... and bake some more.  The rest of the year, I could take it or leave it, but I do have pipe dreams of learning to make macaroons and meringue.  Indeed, when the weather turns crisp, this is when the magic happens.  Adding to the magic, in my mind, is the detail that I dislike making what everyone else is and often endeavor for something different.  My favorite cookie recipe is pumpkin chocolate chip cookies.

This recipe originally came from Nestle's Very Best Baking website, which can be found at  http://www.verybestbaking.com/ .  I tweaked the recipe for Old-Fashioned Soft Pumpkin Cookies a bit to make it suit my tastes and abilities.  Since I can't remember to set butter out in advance to soften, I cut it in pieces and melt it in the microwave when it is time to add it in.  I also add chocolate chips to jazz the recipe up a bit.  Because I am a huge fan of pumpkin, and because it is very healthy, I add an extra half cup of pumpkin.  The only difference I see is the cookies are a bit more tacky, but they taste just as good.

Here is the original recipe:  Old-Fashioned Soft Pumpkin Cookies  Have fun with it, either by adding chocolate chips as I have done, preparing it as offered, or by making it your own in some other way.  I would think some Craisins dried cranberries would be a nice addition as well.