Biblioscopy: A Glimpse of New and Upcoming Books 

New books probe illness, injury, empathy, burnout, and medicine’s fragile yet enduring human limits.
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Winter 2026 

Field Guide to Falling Ill: Essays by Jonathan Gleason 

New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2026, 256 pages 
ISBN 9780300282948 

In these ten exemplary essays, Gleason mingles illness memoir, the challenges of caregiving, and loss (of health and spirit). Disease is portrayed not only as an aberration of the body’s normal homeostasis but also a distinctive event with social, cultural, and possibly historical meaning. Contagions (viruses, prejudices, even love) receive special attention as catalysts of uncertainty, anxiety, and sometimes terror. Spaces – inner, close, distant, and built – are similarly scrutinized. In 1623, the English poet John Donne declared that “the greatest misery of sickness is solitude.” The narrator of the title essay echoes that sentiment, describing “loneliness” as the world’s greatest sorrow. He volunteers as a part-time medical interpreter at a free clinic but suddenly becomes a patient himself with a blood clot in the left arm. These experiences lead to an understanding of the power and limitations of both language and empathy. Other essays explore organ donation, AIDS, mental illness and the demise of large psychiatric hospitals, Tay-Sachs disease and xenophobia, pain, addiction, and the trial of an Ohio doctor charged with multiple counts of murder. Throughout these pages, Gleason points out the hubris of medicine as well as its shortcomings. He writes, “We like to believe we know the vastness of the world, that everything can be explained through our current models of understanding” (p3). At some point (or maybe many times), however, we will all fall ill and become a patient. And that immense world with all its scientific knowledge will dramatically contract to our single suffering body longing to be comforted and cherished by others. 

“An Eye in the Throat” in Good and Evil and Other Stories (pages 57-96) by Samanta Schweblin, translated by Megan McDowell  

New York, NY: Knopf, 2025, 192 pages 
ISBN 9780593803103 

It’s every parent’s nightmare: a serious (and potentially preventable) injury to their child that occurs right in front of them. Here, the setting is Argentina in the 1990’s. Inquisitive two-year-old Elías chokes on a lithium battery from his grandmother’s digital calculator while his father is in charge of watching him play. A visit to the ER and then an appointment with the family doctor the next day offers little reassurance for the parents. On the third day, Elías begins coughing and develops a fever. An operation is performed to remove the lodged battery and repair tissue damage to the esophagus. A tracheostomy is performed, and he undergoes four operations in a span of six years. He is unable to speak. At one point, he mysteriously gets out of his car seat and briefly becomes lost at a gas station. Soon after, a landline phone at home eerily rings each night. When the father answers, there is no voice at the other end. The parents eventually separate. Elías comprehends that all family members are casualties, and with an amazing capacity for empathy concludes, “There is a hole in my throat, a hole in my body that hurts in theirs” (p79). He is enrolled in a special school for deaf and mute children and becomes an outstanding student who is enthralled by language and mathematical physics. Schweblin’s searing story about parental guilt and grieving, failed communication, and the remarkable resiliency of youth is guaranteed to leave you with a lump in your throat. 

A Prescription for Burnout: Restorative Writing for Healthcare Professionals by Carolyn Roy-Bornstein 

Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2026, 208 pages 
ISBN 9781421454733 

Burnout among physicians and nurses, accelerated by the emotional and physical crush of the Covid-19 pandemic, continues to be an urgent problem. Causes of burnout among health professionals include an erosion of autonomy, truncated time allotted for patient visits (but increased time required for inputting data into the electronic medical record system), feeling underappreciated, unrealistic expectations from patients and employers, and the daily exposure to the suffering of others. Roy-Bornstein, a pediatrician and a former RN, enthusiastically endorses reflective writing as an effective remedy for dealing with burnout (or perhaps preventing its occurrence). While not a new concept, her discussion includes research on the utility of restorative writing, some commentary on narrative medicine, and most importantly, more than 85 writing prompts (or Rx’s as she refers to them) for reflection and as a kind of therapeutic exercise. Organized into three sections – Addressing Emotional Exhaustion, Countering Cynicism, and Restoring Self-Efficacy – the book addresses issues of vulnerability, self-compassion, self-awareness, resilience, and optimism. There is no doubt that reflective writing can be healing and hopeful. Roy-Bornstein offers a helpful pathway to reducing the risk of professional burnout.  

Vesalius’s illustration, “Skeleton Contemplating a Skull” from Wellcome Collection

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