

📖 Not your typical medical drama—read it before your colleagues do!
House Of God by Samuel Chem is a highly rated medical fiction bestseller, ranked #99 in its category, offering a candid, humorous, and fast-paced look at the medical profession. With nearly 5,000 reviews and a 4.3-star average, it’s a must-read for professionals seeking an engaging, realistic narrative that challenges conventional portrayals of healthcare.
| ASIN | 0552991228 |
| Best Sellers Rank | 75,105 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) 138 in Medical Fiction (Books) 164 in Doctors & Medicine Humour 1,175 in Social & Health Issues Biographies |
| Book 1 of 3 | The House of God |
| Customer reviews | 4.3 4.3 out of 5 stars (4,801) |
| Dimensions | 12.7 x 2.5 x 19.8 cm |
| Edition | 1st |
| ISBN-10 | 9780552991223 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-0552991223 |
| Item weight | 279 g |
| Language | English |
| Print length | 400 pages |
| Publication date | 1 Feb. 1998 |
| Publisher | Black Swan |
A**D
Excellent
Reasonable quality, used but still readable. Rapid delivery.
P**E
Worth a read!
Great book but a little depressing. If your other half is a doctor maybe set your credulity aside while you read this. Maybe that's what things are like in America but definitely not here, which is a relief! THe writing is funny and engaging and it's a quick, interesting read. I recommend it as long as you're not expecting a saintly, reverent look at the medical profession!
M**T
Funny, Moving, and Just a Little Bit Scary
Have you ever wondered what's going on behind the impassive, professional countenance of a hospital doctor? Have you ever considered those early years in their careers that they spend on wards? How it is that on the day they graduate from medical school they suddenly have all the answers? Well, they don't. "House of God" is Samuel Shem's account of his year as an intern, the first year after medical school (in the UK they're called House Officers). He captures the intensity of the experience perfectly, and the humour that helped him survive makes this book one of the funniest I have ever read. Behind the laughter is a serious account of how he came close to the edge mentally during that first year. The limits of medicine are also revealed, disturbingly for the lay-patient with a naive belief that modern doctors can cure anyone who reaches hospital alive, and there are some sobering conclusions about how we treat the elderly for those who wish to draw them. But I wouldn't want to mislead you - this is above all a hilarious account of a year in the life of a junior doctor in those carefree 70s when alcohol and sex were still recreations and not merely pathologies. The hard edge beneath makes that humour all the more effective, and the occasional tragic event makes the laughter as necessary for the reader's emotional well being as it was for the author. Buy it, read it, and wonder why you had never come across this masterpiece before.
R**E
Hype not delivered
Had this book recommended to me by several senior doctors (usually in the context of complaining about the health service, patients or colleagues). They all seemed to think it was edgy and controversial - a glimpse into the 'real' world of healthcare and revealing the untold truths about how doctors view their patients and each other. In reality, the content is far from revelatory; it is rather old-hat and underwhelming. The book hasn't aged well and has lost much of its relevance to modern medicine. However, it is mildly interesting from a historical perspective. The introduction (written in 1995) claims the book to be outrageous and compares it to Joseph Heller's Catch-22. Nothing in this book is as clever or funny as Catch-22. As for outrageous, I got the end and wondered if I had missed the chapter where the outrageous stuff happened. Perhaps this book is still eye-popping to those who are new to medicine and are, as yet, unjaded. I wonder if those doctors who recommended I read The House of God would still view it as edgy and controversial. There are many other books, since published, that offer the reader a more modern perspective on medicine that I would recommend before bothering with The House of God: In Stitches by Nick Edwards; Sick Notes by Tony Copperfield; Trust Me, I'm a Junior doctor by Max Pemberton.
D**N
Work in a hospital? Read this.
A rather quirky but truly worthwhile book. An absolute classic in the health sector. So if you’re a doctor, paramedic, or nurse, you should read it.
J**R
How not to train a doctor
A lively and bawdy account of medical training in the USA 40 years ago, based on the author's experience, which became a classic plea for humanity in the treatment of patients. Unfortunately the issues behind it are still relevant, and I am going to present it to my granddaughter, currently a medical student, and see what she thinks.
M**T
Sad but real
Sad but real.
D**C
Black humour, full of humanity
Essential reading for all medical students and doctors of all ages - black humour steeped in humanity - when you are in hospital as a patient, hope for "The Fat Man" who relies on your body to heal itself. Watch out for nearly all others. The humour was the only way to survive the system. A classic - generally voted near the top of lists of books to read by doctors - so we recognise ourselves in there somewhere - and of course all our colleagues! Trust me you need a doctor with a sense of humour!
G**O
Libro per tutti i medici, ma soprattutto per chi si affaccia alle professioni sanitarie ospedaliere. Scritto quando non esisteva ancora la "correttezza politica", per cui schietto e vero. Divertentissimo, ed un'ottima scusa per migliorare il proprio Inglese (soprattutto gergo ospedaliero americano). Infatti, utilizzando il dizionario in linea degli e-book, la lettura risulta particolarmente facile anche ai neofiti. Divertente anche per i non medici, tanto per rendersi conto delle mani in cui mettono a volte la loro vita.
V**A
Nice book for doctors and others. I had fun reading it, I think is a helpful guide for medical students and young doctors, and for anyone who wants to discover the other side of the medical care.
D**S
I always knew doctors were practicing medicine just until they got it right. This jaw-dropping book has my opinion's back. Humor, wit and wisdom, pathos, seriousness (but thankfully not overbearing) and other stuff I'd need to look up in a thesaurus. Oh, and the bestest raunchyist erotic descriptions of sex I've read since Tom Robbins. Thanks Mr. Shem. I need to take some of that there acedamenathin stuff now. I'll get back to you. Is early morning a good time?
R**L
Good
D**S
This story is more than ‘for the ages,’ it is even deeper and kinder and more compassionate than Heller’s Catch 22 (til now, my favourite book ever). Shem’s weaving in and out, back and forth between the science and the sadists, the madness and the mayhem, the tragedy and hilarity of ‘healing’ is matched by the profound wisdom in his reflections on the human condition. A story that scarifies the scientistic bullshit of the clinical medical model, while offering hope to those who want to hold out for healthy human relationships and honest conversations. In an era of neoliberal compliance and accreditation creating ‘busy work’ in every field, this book bursts that whole balloon. EVEN MORE RELEVANT TODAY THAN WHEN IT WAS FIRST RELEASED
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