This is an extraordinary book, a piercingly authentic account of the fear, confusion and hope of a young doctor newly deployed to a humanitarian crisis wrapped around by a war. James Maskalyk's commitment to survival - his own as well as his patients' - illuminates this account of doctoring in the sort of desperate place where it couldn't matter more. -- Jonathan Kaplan, author of THE DRESSING STATION
In Six Months in Sudan, James Maskalyk tells of his extraordinary experiences working as a doctor for MSF, without a trace of vanity or self-congratulation. His book serves as a salutary reminder of what it means to be an excellent doctor, and a brave man. For anyone who is interested in a career in medicine, or in courage, this is a book to read. -- Gabriel Weston, author of DIRECT RED
Maskalyk's soft prose is beautiful and invites with the right intimate details. He offers a rare window on the inner life of an aid worker, on what it means to be a humanitarian around the hard edges of war, and on the certain drive to go on. Why? Because in his words, `hope not only meets despair in equal measure, it drowns it.' -- James Orbinski
This journey is beautifully told in sharp beats, and lyrical notes. It is the voyage of a young doctor out into a hard world, and deep within his own heart. -- Vincent Lam
Six Months is Sudan is a wrenchingly heartbreaking account of distant agonies almost too pointed to grasp. Learning about Maskalyk's work there is stirring, but the real miracle is this book paints a picture so precisely and vividly that it becomes impossible to look away. This is Maskalyk's accomplishment, and his gift to the Sudanese and to us. The shame of our indifference retreats before his exhortation: 'learn, and understand,' and perhaps a more bearable future becomes possible for all of us. -- Kevin Patterson
Visceral and immediate . . . As medical literature this book excels; as an insight into that exhilarating, life changing step into chaos his account can hardly be bettered. -- Jonathan Kaplan * * British Medical Journal * *
A moving, sometimes beautifully written, account of a young doctor's time in the Sudanese town of Abeyi . . . The book is very well written and consequently easy to read, despite the subject matter. The juxtaposition of the blog entries and the text works particularly well . . . The book serves as a timely reminder that saving people's lives is worth doing, even in a recession. We are also saving ourselves. -- Padraig Carmody * * Irish Times * *
Through a narrative both personal and provocative, Maskalyk succeeds in animating the quotidien struggles of life in Sudan in ways news reports never will - for those who think life is too short, come to Abyei. -- Peter Geoghegan * * Sunday Business Post * *
The prose in his messages is carefully crafted, often poetic, always deliberate . . . From the moment he disembarks from a World Food Programme plane at the airstrip in Abyei, in southern Kordofan, you're there, in the dust with him - and, when the rains come, in the sea of mud . . . Visceral. -- Mary Crockett * * Scotsman * *
Gripping and humane . . . brave and intelligent. -- Ned Denny * * Daily Mail * *
Honest and fluently written . . . An absorbing insight into international medicine. -- Sally Raikes * * Financial Times * *
Intimate, engaging snippets of life on the MSF front line. -- Peter Geoghegan * * Sunday Business Post * *