Tuesday, June 3, 2014

32YOF Reads EMS Book By NREMT-P

I was going to write this post like I write my patient reports...but then I remembered people might actually want to read this at some point :-)  The reason for this burst of medical creativity is I just finished reading a book called A Paramedic's Story: Life, Death and Everything in Between by Steven "Kelly" Grayson.  This book is not one that lends itself to synopsis, so I will just jump right into rambling about it.
I originally picked this book up for EMS week, and the author regularly posts on EMS1.com and I have enjoyed those.  The book is pretty much a look at the authors EMS life through quick little stories about calls he has run through out his career.  Not a whole lot I can say about the actual content other then it is exactly that, a few pages on each call he chose to wrote about.  I enjoyed reading about the calls in this Louisiana parish that the author worked in for many years.  It was interesting to see how they handle calls, what rules they have that we don't and vice versa, the resources they may or may not have, and different issues they may be concerned about. The structure was a bit rough for me.  I felt like he kept referring to events that we should know about, but had never been discussed.  A lot of times the story would just end, with no resolution to what happened, for example the last sentence in one story is how he and a Dr. were named as primary defendants in a malpractice suite...and that was it, it was never mentioned again.  I would have liked to at least know the outcome of that case as it would be a good teaching moment.  I also wanted to know more about the author personally, he would give us tantalizing tidbits, but rarely any linear cohesiveness...if that makes any sense. I also wanted just a touch more background on the stories, I was never sure where he was at for most of the calls.  My overall impression of the book is that I was intrigued, but I wanted more of everything.  In some ways I think the telling of "calls" works best in person.  Our favorite past time at the station is all gathering around, the table, the grill, the alarm room, the rigs, whatever and share stories over and over again.  This is how we pass stuff on to the new recruits, how we brag, how we bond and as well written as these calls are, it loses something in being read and not told.  I love reading the authors blog, and would love to actually meet him in person and hear his stories.  I give this book a 6 out of 10 lights and sirens.
Do you like to read books that relate to your work?  What are some of the oral vs written story issues?  Do you ever feel like trying to write down your crazy work experiances?

2 comments:

  1. A Paramedic's Story (and the hardcover version "En Route") is a perfect example of how an editor can screw up a perfectly good book.

    The original version, "Life, Death and Everything In Between: A Paramedic's Memoirs" had about 12 additional chapters that provided most of the structure and continuity that a Paramedic's Story is lacking. When the book was picked up by Kaplan, my editor wanted to delete all those chapters of "fluff."

    We fought over it. I lost. I was vindicated by the negative reviews that echoed my arguments over why they shouldn't delete those chapters, but that is cold comfort when there is a book out there with my name on it that is not how I envisioned it.

    I also learned a valuable lesson: Next book I do, I will have more creative control over editing, and negotiating power for film and television rights. I'm pretty sure that the Denis Leary series "Sirens" came about after Kaplan bungled the negotiation with him over rights to my book.

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    1. Thanks for the clarification :-) I do enjoy your blog posts a lot so, glad to hear that the issues with the book were editor error. It cracks me up when editors, or other people consider the personal stuff fluff, when that is what makes us EMT's human in any way shape or form to begin with. I will keep an eye out for your next book and will continue to read your online stuff.

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