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Intensive Care: A Memoir
Barnes and Noble
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Intensive Care: A Memoir in Franklin, TN
Current price: $10.00

Barnes and Noble
Intensive Care: A Memoir in Franklin, TN
Current price: $10.00
Loading Inventory...
Size: OS
One night in April, after a Sunday soccer game, Alan Twigg couldn't remember the names of his two sons or his wifeand he couldn't hold a pen. An emergency CAT scan revealed a large brain tumour squeezed against his motor cortex.
Intensive Care
tells the story of why this was a good thing.
isn't a medical survival story; it's a yearlong reflection on how the imminence of death can enhance life. The grass gets greener. Confirmation that one is loved is exhilarating, more powerful than any drug.
On May 26th,
The Globe & Mail
ran a front page story about a recent medical study that concluded one in five Canadians will have a tumour in their head at some point in their lives. Two days later, Dr. Christopher Honey, a neurosurgeon at Vancouver General Hospital, removed the benign tumour from Alan Twigg's head during a five-hour operation. He started writing again, in the Intensive Care ward, three hours later.
Intensive Care
tells the story of why this was a good thing.
isn't a medical survival story; it's a yearlong reflection on how the imminence of death can enhance life. The grass gets greener. Confirmation that one is loved is exhilarating, more powerful than any drug.
On May 26th,
The Globe & Mail
ran a front page story about a recent medical study that concluded one in five Canadians will have a tumour in their head at some point in their lives. Two days later, Dr. Christopher Honey, a neurosurgeon at Vancouver General Hospital, removed the benign tumour from Alan Twigg's head during a five-hour operation. He started writing again, in the Intensive Care ward, three hours later.
One night in April, after a Sunday soccer game, Alan Twigg couldn't remember the names of his two sons or his wifeand he couldn't hold a pen. An emergency CAT scan revealed a large brain tumour squeezed against his motor cortex.
Intensive Care
tells the story of why this was a good thing.
isn't a medical survival story; it's a yearlong reflection on how the imminence of death can enhance life. The grass gets greener. Confirmation that one is loved is exhilarating, more powerful than any drug.
On May 26th,
The Globe & Mail
ran a front page story about a recent medical study that concluded one in five Canadians will have a tumour in their head at some point in their lives. Two days later, Dr. Christopher Honey, a neurosurgeon at Vancouver General Hospital, removed the benign tumour from Alan Twigg's head during a five-hour operation. He started writing again, in the Intensive Care ward, three hours later.
Intensive Care
tells the story of why this was a good thing.
isn't a medical survival story; it's a yearlong reflection on how the imminence of death can enhance life. The grass gets greener. Confirmation that one is loved is exhilarating, more powerful than any drug.
On May 26th,
The Globe & Mail
ran a front page story about a recent medical study that concluded one in five Canadians will have a tumour in their head at some point in their lives. Two days later, Dr. Christopher Honey, a neurosurgeon at Vancouver General Hospital, removed the benign tumour from Alan Twigg's head during a five-hour operation. He started writing again, in the Intensive Care ward, three hours later.

















