
Résumé:
The original version of this immensely engaging,
painstakingly composed journal about a provincial doctor who
makes house calls was hailed in France upon its publication
in 1997. Like the physician whose logbook it describes,
Winckler, the nom de plume of French author Marc Zaffran, is
a general practitioner who, according to the publisher, has
chosen writing as his preferred method of helping sick
people. Bruno Sachs, "single-minded, hypermoral, kind of
jerky," sets out his shingle in the small French town of Play
because it needs a doctor and his abiding ambition is to obey
the Hippocratic Oath. The journal is made up of discrete
chapters or vignettes written in the unassuming voices of his
patients, mostly farmers and small tradespeople, employees
and family members. Throughout, Sachs is referred to as
"You," e.g., "You're a good guy and you're very clear, but I
do think you ask some questions that are a little too
personal." Sachs's "part-shrink part-father-confessor" manner
wins the trust of his flock, whose litany of physical
torments gradually plunges him into a paroxysm of grief and
pity. He is especially sympathetic to the needs of women; he
gives them abortions at the clinic, and eventually falls in
love with his patient Pauline Kasser. Above all, Sachs is a
good listener, and it is by this gift alone that he often
comes to the heart of a patient's suffering. Sachs finds true
love with Pauline, who in turn encourages him to heal through
writing. There is no unifying, cohesive drama to the novel
save in the personality of Sachs, but rather a series of
deeply felt leitmotifs (smoothly translated with the American
reader in mind). As Sachs opens himself to the inexorability
of human misery, Winckler allows glimpses into the doctor's
personal notebooks and confessions, thereby completing his
affecting portrait of a fallible and saintly fellow tortured
by his powerlessness to turn back death. (Oct.)
Bruno Sachs is a French country doctor, but don't mistake
him for a Gallic Marcus Welby. This doc is a paradox: cynical
but compassionate, emotional yet reserved, reassuring but
troubled. His personality is revealed bit by bit in over 100
short chapters as related by his patients and associates. He
cares deeply about them and a few close friends but seems
remote and unfulfilled until he falls in love. The episodic
structure seems choppy at first, but over time several
subplots develop, and a variety of different patients are
portrayed in some detail. This book is simultaneously a
powerful critique of modern medicine by a former country
doctor, a realistic romance, and a fascinating character
study. Published as La Maladie de Sachs in 1997, this book
was a French best seller and the winner of the Prix du Livre
Inter. Highly recommended for both public and academic
libraries.DJim Dwyer, California State Univ., Chico
From Publishers Weekly
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.From Library Journal
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.