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Never Caught: The Washingtons' Relentless Pursuit of Their Runaway Slave, Ona Judge, by Erica Armstrong Dunbar

Never Caught: The Washingtons' Relentless Pursuit of Their Runaway Slave, Ona Judge, by Erica Armstrong Dunbar



Never Caught: The Washingtons' Relentless Pursuit of Their Runaway Slave, Ona Judge, by Erica Armstrong Dunbar

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Never Caught: The Washingtons' Relentless Pursuit of Their Runaway Slave, Ona Judge, by Erica Armstrong Dunbar

“A fascinating and moving account of a courageous and resourceful woman. Beautifully written and utilizing previously untapped sources it sheds new light both on the father of our country and on the intersections of slavery and freedom.” —Eric Foner, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of The Fiery Trial and Gateway to Freedom

A startling and eye-opening look into America’s First Family, Never Caught is the powerful narrative of Ona Judge, George and Martha Washington’s runaway slave who risked everything to escape the nation’s capital and reach freedom.

When George Washington was elected president, he reluctantly left his beloved Mount Vernon to serve in Philadelphia, the temporary seat of the nation’s capital. In setting up his household he took Tobias Lear, his celebrated secretary and eight slaves, including Ona Judge, about whom little has been written. As he grew accustomed to Northern ways, there was one change he couldn’t get his arms around: Pennsylvania law required enslaved people be set free after six months of residency in the state. Rather than comply, Washington decided to circumvent the law. Every six months he sent the slaves back down south just as the clock was about to expire.

Though Ona Judge lived a life of relative comfort, the few pleasantries she was afforded were nothing compared to freedom, a glimpse of which she encountered first-hand in Philadelphia. So, when the opportunity presented itself, Judge left everything she knew to escape to New England. Yet freedom would not come without its costs.

At just twenty-two-years-old, Ona became the subject of an intense manhunt led by George Washington, who used his political and personal contacts to recapture his property.

With impeccable research, historian Erica Armstrong Dunbar weaves a powerful tale and offers fascinating new scholarship on how one young woman risked it all to gain freedom from the famous founding father.

  • Sales Rank: #1987 in Books
  • Published on: 2017-02-07
  • Released on: 2017-02-07
  • Original language: English
  • Dimensions: 9.00" h x .90" w x 6.00" l, .0 pounds
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 272 pages

Review
“A fascinating and moving account of a courageous and resourceful woman. �Beautifully written and utilizing previously untapped sources it sheds new light both on the father of our country and on the intersections of slavery and freedom in the flawed republic he helped to found.”
� (Eric Foner, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of The Fiery Trial and Gateway to Freedom)

"Never Caught is�the compelling story of Ona Judge Staines, the woman who successfully defied George and Martha Washington in order to live as free woman. With vivid prose and deep sympathy, Dunbar paints a portrait of woman whose life reveals the contradictions at the heart of the American founding: men like Washington fought for liberty for themselves even as they kept people like Ona Staines in bondage. There is no way to really know the Washingtons without knowing this story." (Annette Gordon Reed, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of The Hemings of Monticello)

"A crisp and compulsively readable feat of research and storytelling." (USA Today)

"Totally engrossing and absolutely necessary for understanding the birth of the American Republic,�Never Caught�is richly human history from the vantage point of the enslaved fifth of the early American population. Here is Ona Judge’s (successful) quest for freedom, on one side, and, on the other, George and Martha Washington’s (vain) use of federal power to try to keep her�enslaved.” (Nell Irvin Painter, author of Sojourner Truth, A Life, A Symbol)

"Dunbar has teased out Ona Judge from the shadows of history and given us a determined woman who rejected life as a slave in the comfortable household of George Washington for the risks of freedom . We see Washington -- a man torn by conflicting sentiments about slavery -- in a new and ambiguous light, and plunge with Judge into the teeming cities of the young republic, where for the first time Americans are beginning to grapple with the contradiction between the Founders' ideals and the unyielding fact of slavery. No one who reads this book will think quite the same way about George and Martha Washington again." (Fergus M. Bordewich, author of The First Congress)

"Dunbar brings to life the forgotten story of a woman who fled enslavement from America’s First Family. Her mostly Northern story is a powerful reminder that the tentacles of slavery could reach from the South, all the way to the state of New Hampshire. The surprising part of this true history is not that she achieved her freedom, but the lengths to which George and Martha Washington would go to try to recapture a young woman who insulted them by rejecting bondage." (Gretchen Holbrook Gerzina, Dean of Commonwealth Honors College and author of Mr & Ms. Prince)

“In this riveting and thoroughly researched account of the life of Ona Judge Staines, historian Erica Armstrong Dunbar carefully and compellingly constructs enslaved life inside The President's House and in the larger urban and rural communities of the time.� A true page-turner, readers will come away with a deeper appreciation of enslaved people’s lives and a disturbing portrait of George and Martha Washington as slave owners. �This book will change the way we study the history of slavery in the U.S, the history of American Presidents, and especially the burgeoning field of black women’s history.” (Daina Ramey Berry, Historian at the University of Texas at Austin and author of The Price for Their Pound of Flesh)

“With the production of the Tony-award winning play, Hamilton, many Americans have been reminded of the noble actions of the nation’s fathers and mothers in birthing a new country founded on democracy, liberty, and freedom. In Never Caught historian Erica Armstrong Dunbar pulls back the curtain on their individual actions by focusing on Ona Judge, an enslaved woman owned by Martha and George Washington, who stole herself to freedom and refused to be reenslaved. Piecing together the fragments of a life, in vivid prose, Dunbar reminds us of the tremendous toll slavery visited on men and women of conscience and conviction, both black and white. This is a must read for anyone interested in this nation’s long pursuit of perfecting freedom.” (Earl Lewis, President of The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation)

"A startling, well-researched . �. .�narrative that seriously questions the intentions of our first president." (Kirkus Reviews)

“There are books that can take over your life: Try as you might, you can’t seem to escape their mysterious power. That’s the feeling I had when reading the tour de force, Never Caught.”� (Essence Magazine)

"[Dunbar] sketches an evocative portrait of�[Ona's] daily life, both before and after her risky escape. For the reader, as for Judge, George Washington the Founding Father takes a back seat to George Washington the slave master. (Pacific Standard Magazine)

"Dunbar weaves an unforgettable story about a courageous woman willing to risk everything for freedom." (Real Simple)

"Erica Armstrong Dunbar combines the known facts of Ona’s life in service to the Washingtons with vivid descriptions of the physical and emotional conditions early American slaves faced." (New York Post)

"Compulsively readible" (USA Today)

About the Author
Erica Armstrong Dunbar is the Blue and Gold Distinguished Professor of Black Studies and History at the University of Delaware. In 2011, Professor Dunbar was appointed the first director of the Program in African American History at the Library Company of Philadelphia. She has been the recipient of Ford, Mellon, and SSRC fellowships and most recently has been named an Organization of American Historians Distinguished Lecturer. Yale University Press published her first book, A Fragile Freedom: African American Women and Emancipation in the Antebellum City was published by Yale University Press in 2008.

Excerpt. � Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Never Caught One Betty’s Daughter



List of slaves at Mount Vernon, 1799. Courtesy of Mount Vernon Ladies’ Association.

In June of 1773, the unimaginable happened: it snowed in Virginia.

During the first week of June, the typical stifling heat that almost always blanketed Virginia had not yet laid its claim on the colony. Daytime temperatures fluctuated from sultry warmth to a rainy chill during the first few days of the month. Even more peculiar yet, on June 11, it snowed. As he did most days, Colonel George Washington sat down and recorded the unusual weather, writing, “Cloudy & exceeding Cold Wind fresh from the No. West, & Snowing.” His diary went on to note, “Memorandum—Be it remembered that on the eleventh day of June in the year one thousand seven hundred and seventy three It rain’d Hail’d snow’d and was very Cold.”



The men and women who lived on George and Martha Washington’s estate must have marveled at the peculiar snow, but whatever excitement the unusual weather brought was most certainly replaced by concern. Shabby clothing and uninsulated slave cabins turned winter into long periods of dread for the enslaved men and women at Mount Vernon and across the colony of Virginia. Although the intense heat of summer brought its own difficulties, winter brought sickness, long periods of isolation, and heightened opportunities for the auction block. To exacerbate matters, the selling of slaves frequently occurred at the beginning of the year, connecting the winter month of January to a fear of deep and permanent loss. The snow in June, then, could only be a sign of very bad things to come. For the nearly 150 slaves who labored on the Mount Vernon estate in 1773, a mixture of superstition, African religious practices, and English beliefs in witchery must have intensified a sense of fear. Things that were inconsistent with nature were interpreted as bad omens, commonly bringing drought, pestilence, and death. As for what this snow portended, only time would tell.

Sure enough, eight days after the snow fell, Martha Parke Custis, daughter of Martha Washington, fell terribly ill. The stepdaughter of George Washington, just seventeen, had long struggled with a medical condition that rendered her incapable of controlling her body. Plagued by seizures that began during her teenage years, “Patsy” Custis most likely suffered from epilepsy. The early discipline of medicine was far from mature, offering few options for cures outside of bleeding and purges. Her parents had spent the last five years consulting with doctors and experimenting with unhelpful medicinal potions, diet, exercise modifications, and of course, deep prayer.

Their faith was tested on June 19 when Patsy Custis and a host of invited family members were finishing up with dinner a little after four o’clock. Although sickly, Washington’s stepdaughter had been “in better health and spirits than she appeared to have been in for some time.” After dinner and quiet conversation with family, Patsy excused herself and went to retrieve a letter from her bedroom. Eleanor Calvert, Patsy’s soon-to-be sister-in-law, went to check on the young woman and found her seizing violently on the floor. Patsy was moved to the bed, but there was very little anyone could do. Within two minutes, she was gone.

The June snow and Patsy’s death combined to create an eerie feeling of uncertainty. House slaves understood that Martha Washington would need to be handled with more care than usual, especially since this was not the first child that she had lost. Two of her toddlers had succumbed to the high childhood mortality rates of colonial Virginia, and Patsy’s death left the devastated mother with only one living child. George Washington wrote to his nephew, breaking the news of his stepdaughter’s death and his wife’s emotional distress, stating, “I scarce need add [that Patsy’s death] has almost reduced my poor Wife to the lowest ebb of Misery.” George Washington wasn’t the only one attuned to Martha’s emotional state. Slave women who worked in the Mansion House tended to the devastated Martha Washington, taking great care to respect their grieving mistress, while helping the household prepare for Patsy’s funeral.

Yet while the mistress Martha Washington wept over the loss of her daughter, a slave woman named Betty (also known as Mulatto Betty) prepared for an arrival of her own. Born sometime around 1738, Betty was a dower slave; that is, she was “property” owned by Martha Washington’s first husband, Daniel Parke Custis. As a seamstress and expert spinner who was among Mrs. Washington’s favored slaves, the bondwoman had a long history with her mistress, one that predated the relationship between Colonel Washington and his wife and one that had seen Martha endure great heartbreak. In 1757 Betty watched her mistress survive the sudden loss of her first husband, followed by the death of her four-year-old daughter, Frances. She also watched Martha reemerge from sorrow’s clutch. Betty continued to spin and sew as her mistress took control of the family business, which included six plantations and close to three hundred slaves that fed Virginia’s tobacco economy. With the death of her husband, Martha Parke Custis stood in control of over 17,500 acres of land, making her one of the wealthiest widows in the colony of Virginia, if not throughout the entire Chesapeake.

Before her move to Mount Vernon, Betty worked in the Custis home known as the White House on the Pamunkey River in New Kent County, Virginia. Two years after the death of her owner, Betty learned that her mistress was to remarry. She most likely received the news of her mistress’s impending second marriage with great wariness as word spread that Martha Custis’s intended was Colonel George Washington. The colonel was a fairly prominent landowner with a respectable career as a military officer and an elected member of the Virginia House of Burgesses. His marriage to the widowed Martha Custis would offer him instant wealth and the stability of a wife and family that had eluded him. For her part, the young widow had managed to secure a surrogate father to help raise her two living children. She had also found a partner with whom she could spend the rest of her days. Nevertheless, a huge yet necessary transition awaited Martha Custis as she prepared to marry and move to the Mount Vernon estate, nearly one hundred miles away.

For Betty, as well as the hundreds of other slaves that belonged to the Custis estate, the death of their previous owner and Martha’s marriage to George Washington was a reminder of their vulnerability. It was often after the death of an owner that slaves were sold to remedy the debts held by an estate. Betty and all those enslaved at New Kent had no idea what kind of financial transactions would transpire, which families would be split apart, never to be united again. For enslaved women, the moral character of the new owner was also a serious concern. When George and Martha Washington married in January of 1759, Betty was approximately twenty-one years old and considered to be in the prime of her reproductive years. She was unfamiliar with her new master’s preferences, or more importantly, if he would choose to exercise his complete control over her body. All of the enslaved women who would leave for Mount Vernon most likely worried about their new master’s protocol regarding sexual relations with his slaves. But of greater consequence for Betty was the future for her young son, Austin. Born sometime around 1757, Austin was a baby or young toddler when his mistress took George Washington’s hand in marriage. To lose him before she even got to know him, to have joined the thousands who stood by powerlessly while their children were “bartered for gold,” as the poet Frances Ellen Watkins Harper wrote, would have been devastating.



As she prepared to move to Mount Vernon, Martha Washington selected a number of slaves to accompany her on the journey to Fairfax County. Betty and Austin were, to Betty’s relief, among them. The highest-valued mother-and-child pair in a group that counted 155 slaves, they arrived in April of 1759.

Betty managed to do what many slave mothers couldn’t: keep her son. Austin’s very young age would have prohibited the Custis estate from fetching a high price if he were sold independently from his mother. Perhaps this fact, in addition to Betty’s prized position in the Custis household, ensured that she would stay connected to her child as she moved away from the place she had called home.

As Martha Washington settled into her new life with her second husband at Mount Vernon, a sprawling estate consisting of five separate farms, Betty also adapted, continuing her spinning, weaving, tending to her son, and making new family and friends at the plantation. The intricacies of Betty’s romantic life at Mount Vernon remain unclear, but what we do know is that more than a decade after giving birth to Austin, Betty welcomed more children into the world. Her son, Tom Davis, was born around 1769, and his sister Betty Davis arrived in 1771. Unlike Austin, these two children claimed a last name, one that most likely linked them to a hired white weaver named Thomas Davis.

George and Martha Washington placed their most “valued” and favored slaves inside the household. Martha Washington allowed only those slaves she felt to be the most polished and intelligent to toil within the walls of the main house, and that included Betty, whose skills as a clothier ranged from knowledge of expert weaving to the dyeing of expensive and scarce fabric. Betty and a corps of talented enslaved seamstresses not only outfitted their masters but also stitched together clothing for the hundreds of slaves at Mount Vernon.

Now, in 1773, fourteen years after she watched her mistress experience the death of her first child, Betty witnessed her mistress come undone once again. The loss of her daughter Patsy left Martha Washington almost inconsolable and stood in contrast with Betty’s relative good fortune. Martha Washington had lost young Frances in 1759, just as Betty was blessed with the arrival of her son Austin. Now, the circumstances were nearly identical, for as Martha Washington grieved over the loss of her daughter, Betty began preparing for the arrival of another child. June snow served as a marker of death for the Washingtons but issued a very different signal to Betty. It marked the beginning of a life that would be as unusual as summertime winter weather. Sometime around or after the June snow of 1773, Betty gave birth to a daughter named Ona Maria Judge. This girl child would come to represent the complexity of slavery, the limits of black freedom, and the revolutionary sentiments held by many Americans. She would be called Oney.

Betty, like other bondwomen, increased her owner’s wealth each time she bore a child. Although she called George Washington her master, he owned neither Betty nor her children. As a dower slave, Betty was technically owned by Martha Washington and the Custis estate. The birth of Ona Judge would not add value to George Washington’s coffers, but her body would be counted among the human property that would produce great profit for Martha Washington and the Custis children and grandchildren.

Similar to Betty’s other children, Ona had a surname. It belonged to her father, Andrew Judge, an English-born white man. On July 8, 1772, Andrew Judge found his way to America via an indenture agreement, contracting himself to Alexander Coldelough, a merchant from Leeds, England. In exchange for his passage to “Baltimore or any port in America” as well as a promise of food, clothing, appropriate shelter, and an allowance, Judge handed over four years of his life. Although indentured servitude served as the engine for population growth in the early seventeenth century, Andrew Judge entered into service at a time when fewer and fewer English men agreed to hand over their lives for an opportunity in the colonies. Why did he come? Indenture agreements never made clear the circumstances from which a person was exiting, so it is quite possible that Judge was running from debt or a life of destitution. Whatever the problem, the solution for Judge was life as a servant in the colonies, uncertainty and all.

He landed in Alexandria, Virginia, where George Washington purchased his indenture for thirty pounds. Mount Vernon relied primarily upon slave labor; however, Washington included a number of white indentured servants in his workforce. White servitude had its advantages, but by the late eighteenth century, planters like Washington often complained about their unreliability, their tendency for attempted escape, and their laziness. Yet Andrew Judge did not appear as the target of Washington’s ire in any of his correspondence. In fact he became a trusted tailor relied upon by the colonel for outfitting him at the most important of moments. By 1774 he appeared in the Mount Vernon manager’s account book as responsible for creating the blue uniform worn by Washington when he was named commander in chief of the American forces. Judge was responsible for making clothing for the entire Washington family, which would have required him to make frequent visits to the main house, where he would come into contact with Betty. In her mid- to late thirties, Betty became acquainted with the indentured tailor.

Interracial relationships were far from uncommon in Virginia at the time, and many mixed-race children were counted among the enslaved. Perhaps Betty and Andrew Judge flirted with one another, eventually engaging in a mutual affair. Maybe the two bound laborers fell in love. If either of these scenarios were true, Betty probably chose her lover, a most powerful example of agency in the life of an enslaved woman. Understanding the inherited status of slavery, Betty would have known that any child born to her would carry the burden of slavery, that any child she bore would be enslaved. Nonetheless, a union with Andrew Judge could facilitate a road to emancipation for their child and perhaps for Betty herself. Eventually Judge would work through his servitude agreement and become a free man. If he saved enough money, he could offer to purchase his progeny, as well as Betty and her additional children. Although a legal union in Virginia between a white man and a black woman would not be recognized for almost two centuries, Judge’s eventual rise in status out of the ranks of servant to that of a free, landholding, white man offered potential power. Andrew Judge may not have been able to marry Betty, but if he loved her, he could try to protect her and her family from the vulnerability of slavery.

Love or romance, however, may not have brought the two bound laborers together. Although he was a servant, Andrew Judge was a white man with the power to command or force a sexual relationship with the enslaved Betty. What is lost to us is just how consensual their relationship may have been. Perhaps Judge stalked Betty, eventually forcing himself upon her. As a black woman, she would have virtually no ability to protect herself from unwanted advances or sexual attack. The business of slavery received every new enslaved baby with open arms, no matter the circumstances of conception. What we do know is that their union, whether brief or extended, consensual or unwanted, resulted in the birth of a daughter. We also know that however Judge defined his relationship to his daughter, it wasn’t enough to keep him at Mount Vernon.

Eventually Andrew Judge left and built upon the opportunity that indentured servitude promised. By the 1780s Andrew Judge lived in his own home in Fairfax County. Listed among the occupants of his home were six additional residents, one of whom was black. It’s uncertain if Andrew Judge owned a slave or if he simply hired a free black person who lived on and worked his land. What is clear from the evidence left behind is that Judge left Mount Vernon and his enslaved daughter behind. Perhaps he attempted to purchase Betty and his child but was refused the opportunity by the Washingtons. Or maybe Judge simply didn’t want a complicated relationship with an enslaved woman and a mixed-race daughter. Whatever hope, if any, Betty had placed upon the relationship with Andrew Judge collapsed quickly, leaving her at Mount Vernon to raise Ona and her siblings, including Philadelphia, a daughter she gave birth to after Ona but before Judge left, sometime around 1780.

Leaving his child behind at Mount Vernon, Andrew Judge’s parting gift to his daughter was a surname and a unique first name. The name is both African and Gaelic, and no other slave at Mount Vernon or the White House on the Pamunkey River was named Ona. Perhaps even more exceptional was that she was given a middle name, Maria. Her distinctive name set her apart from her siblings and from the majority of the other bondmen and bondwomen who toiled with her in Virginia.



The slaves who were directly connected to the work at the Mansion House lived across the road from the blacksmith’s forge in the communal space known as the Quarters, or House for Families. Betty and other women who worked in the Mansion House were typically required to be present from sunrise to sundown, preparing meals, mending clothes, cleaning, spinning, and performing other domestic tasks, leaving most enslaved children separated from their parent or parents most of the day. Many of the children at Mount Vernon began structured labor between the ages of nine and fourteen, but most performed odd jobs just as soon as they were physically able. As very young enslaved children were unhelpful and sometimes considered a nuisance, they were often left in the Quarters without much supervision beyond the older slave women, who were deemed incapable of working in the fields and no longer up to the task of domestic work.

Bushy haired, with light skin and freckles, a young Ona probably spent some of her days playing with her siblings and other enslaved children in the Quarters. More often than not, though, she had to learn how to fend for herself. Judge and the other children at Mount Vernon cried out in loneliness for their parents, witnessed the brutality of whippings and corporal punishment, and fell victim to early death due to accidental fires and drowning. Childhood for enslaved girls and boys was fleeting and fraught with calamity. Many perished before reaching young adulthood. Judge’s childhood wasn’t shortened by a plantation fatality. Instead, hers ended at age ten, when she was called to serve Martha Washington up at the Mansion House.

A good number of children at Mount Vernon did not live with both of their parents, a circumstance created by the separation of enslaved spouses. Washington may not have broken up slave marriages by selling away husbands and wives, but he was not averse to separating slave couples by placing them on different farms. While he may not have purposefully disrupted slave unions, the business of slavery and the needs of Mount Vernon always came first. For slave couples and enslaved families, this meant that they would see each other only when permission was given.

Just like other enslaved children, Ona Judge did not spend the majority of her youth with two parents. Andrew Judge had the privilege of white skin and the power anchored in a male body that allowed him to slip away from a life of unpaid labor. Betty had neither gender nor race on her side, and spent the entirety of her life in human bondage in Virginia, a colony that would eventually become the slave-breeding capital of a new nation. Ona Judge learned valuable lessons from both of her parents. From her mother she would learn the power of perseverance. From her father, Judge would learn that the decision to free oneself trumped everything, no matter who was left behind.

Most helpful customer reviews

32 of 33 people found the following review helpful.
A Must-Read
By Good Advice
What an incredible piece of history. Startling and inspiring at once. In Ona Judge Staines, I'd say we have a new American hero. A 22-year old enslaved girl who chose a dirt poor fugitive's life in New Hampshire over a "privileged" life of slavery, a girl who ran away from no less than the beloved first president of the USA! Her courage is hard to fathom. And the Washingtons -- wow -- how slyly and relentlessly they chased her down. Amazing story. Must read!

11 of 11 people found the following review helpful.
Fantastic Story Pieced Together By Research
By Karla T
Since learning about the Broadway Play Hamilton, I have been obsessed with the American Revolution. The history books are filled with harrowing tales of the Founding Fathers, stories undoubtedly pieced together from scores of journals and papers recorded by the Founders themselves. Never do you hear tales of the Founding Fathers from a slave's perspective. I'm sure one would find that, contrary to how these men pictured themselves, they were neither hero nor martyr in the privacy of their homes. That is what makes this story so unique! Most slaves could neither read nor write, so most historical accounts are not from their perspective. Thousands of slave stories left this earth unrecorded. It took the brilliance and curiosity of Dr. Dunbar to finally tell this story of a brave Ona Judge who risked everything for freedom; a slave who escaped the service of the most powerful man in the US at the time.

Dr. Dunbar used her skill as a researcher and understanding of African American history to weave together a detailed story about a fierce young woman born into slavery, the property of an estate. What an incredibly difficult task it must have been to piece together such a complex story without concrete facts. Dunbar's ability to draw inferences based on the time period allowed Ona's story to take shape. The attention to detail gave depth and breadth to the historical breadcrumbs left by a woman who chose life as a fugitive over slavery.

My life has been forever impacted by this story. Born in another time, I don't know that I would have had Ona Judge's same courage to leave everything that I knew for a life of uncertainty, forever looking over my shoulder. Leaving my family, succumbing to fear, unable to find employment, illiterate, poor, all of these things would paralyze me, which is why I look to Ona Judge as a modern day hero.

29 of 32 people found the following review helpful.
A MUST READ!!! Incredible story and excellent research and writing.
By M. White
In today's Digital Age, we often take documentation, pictures, and information for granted. Never Caught covers an era where information, especially about African Americans, was scarce. Dr. Dunbar uses her abundant knowledge of “Black Studies and History” and countless years of research to piece together the incredible story of Ona Judge.

Dunbar eloquently examines the psyches of Ona Judge and President George and Mrs. Martha Washington (both before and after Ona’s escape). In doing so, she highlights the fact that slave owners did not understand the misery of human bondage. They believed that slaves were “better off” serving them than being freed. On the other hand, Dunbar highlights the fact that fugitives or freed slaves would “rather suffer death than return to slavery."

Top 3 reasons I am recommending Never Caught:

1. It highlights the resilience and strength of Ona Judge, without minimizing the atrocities of slavery. Often times books on slavery leave us bitter because of the horrific treatment of slaves. Other books seem to lighten history in an attempt to avoid the bitterness. Never Caught leaves the reader informed AND inspired.

2. By chronicling the mental and physical state of Ona Judge, Never Caught shows the daily tournament fugitives endured in order to live a life of freedom. This story reminds us of the importance of freedom and the prices that many paid for it.

3. It reminds us of the importance of community. Without community, it is doubtful that Ona Judge would have been successful. The willingness of the community to embrace, help, and sacrifice for one another is refreshing.

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Kamis, 23 Oktober 2014

[V131.Ebook] Fee Download Euchre Strategies, by Fred Benjamin

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Euchre Strategies, by Fred Benjamin

Euchre Strategies, by Fred Benjamin



Euchre Strategies, by Fred Benjamin

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Euchre Strategies, by Fred Benjamin

This book gives extensive explanations of euchre strategies. It is organized as a reference document for easy topical access. The emphasis of the book is to explain optimal tactics for any situation. The book includes examples and the ideas have been verified using a specially written computer simulator to records thousands of hands for given scenarios and tabulate results to draw conclusions. Interactive software that uses and teaches the subject matter in this text is available through download.com. The title of that software is Euchre Challenge and Teacher.

  • Sales Rank: #694177 in Books
  • Brand: Brand: Lulu.com
  • Published on: 2007-12-26
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 9.00" h x .23" w x 6.00" l, .33 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 92 pages
Features
  • Used Book in Good Condition

Most helpful customer reviews

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.
Five Stars
By Darcie Clark
Detailed and easy to understand

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful.
Emulator costs extra and adds spyware
By R. Winners
I got this book because I was interested in using the Euchre emulator to improve my play. The Emulator that is referenced in the book is not free and you have to buy it for $25. In addition, when you download the emulator from cnet/download it tries to install other software (click next agrees that you want to install....). Bad way of doing business.

The book is just a brain dump and not a good guide for a beginner player.

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.
Save Your money
By Wet Hackles
This book is totally useless! The author has designed a program to run simulations on all possible situations that come up in the game of euchre. The problem is, he can't translate them into useable strategies. His writing is so specific as to be useless. As an example here is what he says about bidding for the novice:

When calling trump one should have a minimun of 2 trumps to the RIGHT or 3 trumps to the LEFT. Call trump with any 3 cards of the same suit if...
*you are 2 suited
*the opposition turned down the same color
*you have non-trump ACE(s)
Bidding a weak hand has the advantage of preventing your opposition from having the option of declaring trump.

Seat 1 If you are bidding from the first seat, a stronger hand is needed to order the opposition to pick up the hand.

Seat 2 To order up your partner you should have a minimum of
1) The RIGHT and another trump
2) The LEFT, another trump and a non-trump ACE
3) 3 trumps

Seat 3 Almost 3 winning tricks are needed to order the opposition to pick up the card if you play 3rd on the 1st trick for 3 reasons:
1)Your partner may not be able to lead trump, enhancing the oppositions ruffing opportunities
2)Your partner has first chance to make trump if the dealer passes
3)You can get a 2 point euchre if the dealer decided to pick it up.

If that helps you to play better as a novice, good for you.

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Jumat, 17 Oktober 2014

[H439.Ebook] PDF Download India Shattering the Illusion, by Columbus Falco

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India Shattering the Illusion, by Columbus Falco

Over 230 pictures - The beauty and horror - the history - the myth of the Sepoy revolt of 1857 - the religions - the national separatist movements, to the modern nations of the sub continent. - peeling back the layers of the onion that is India. For the deeper the peel the worse the stench. “India Shattering the Illusion: The Birth of New Nations. From Kashmir to Eelam” is a book about the “crumbling” subcontinent. It states the reasons why a region of 1 billion 700 million people has failed so terribly that the only path left is the birth of new nations.
The governments of India, Pakistan, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka have regressed in so many aspects since their independence from the British Empire to the point the collective future for the majority of people of the Sub Continent are so utterly hopeless they cannot solve an ever growing crisis created by the new elite since independence. The book goes into the relevant history, and myths that formed these nations, the rich tapestry of the kaleidoscope of cultures, philosophies, and diversity that has effectively masked to the world a horror which should not even exist.
This book states how the world sees the once great cultures of the Sub Continent and how they have worked for some and against most. Due to the incredible diversity of the subcontinent the book addresses why each region should become a nation based on its own collective history and
culture.
Since the end of British rule in 1947 India has declined into the largest failed state in the history of nations. Starting from the first page - The Truth is that India’s leadership is the world’s most DEGENERATE, DUPLICITOUS and DEBAUCHED ruling class to have ever existed – carnage is happening today in India the likes of which has not been seen in thousands of years. All under an Illusion of harmony and accord while WE in Western societies go about our daily lives.
It is not our task to stop the destitution of the hundreds of million miserable wretches that inhabit that land, indeed not, it is theirs to do – by whatever means necessary - by petition if possible. or Revolution if need be. It is theirs to give birth to new nations from Kashmir to Eelam. The "experiment" of modern India is so horrible there are no parallels in human history. The holocaust of Nazi Europe to that of the worst Revolutions. No Great World War has sustained such unacknowledged misery. The nightmare of the unending sadness of the absolutism of radical Islam are drowned by the sheer breath and scale of the collective horror of India. Death by any means imaginable - children cut into pieces while alive. Living animals ripped apart before other animals to witness before thrown, often while still conscious onto burning sacrificial fire. Human corpses are dug up and the rotten flesh is eaten. Present day slavery at unprecedented levels and
rising.
WARNING TO TRAVELERS THESE PAGES WILL TELL AND SHOW ALL

  • Sales Rank: #2061651 in eBooks
  • Published on: 2015-10-14
  • Released on: 2015-10-14
  • Format: Kindle eBook

About the Author
About the Author— Mr. Columbus Falco the author of these books, Crucible of Decline, America's Plague and Plunder and Shattering America United No More, each dealing with the impending collapse of the dollar and society and India Shattering the Illusion - The Birth of New Nations - Kashmir to Elam. This book tackled the complexity of Asia's sub-Continent, history, its many faiths, and modern policies that have camouflaged the failed nation of India. Falco, a veteran, was educated at universities in the U.S. and Europe. His books are straight to the point - no nonsense literature.

Most helpful customer reviews

4 of 6 people found the following review helpful.
Waste of time.
By SR
What a joke. This 'book' is essentially a hate festival against the worlds largest democracy and the worlds 3 largest economy, well on its way to becoming the 2nd largest in 20 years !! Makes you wonder who this author is. I guess anybody can write a 'book' and carry it on Amazon. Dont waste your time even attempting to read this junk.

2 of 5 people found the following review helpful.
From Kashmir to Eelam" is awesome. I have read many books on the sub ...
By R. S. Bagala
-- The book "India Shattering The Illusion. The Birth of New Nations. From Kashmir to Eelam" is awesome. I have read many books on the sub continent but none are like this book. To give it credit I would have to write a page, so instead I will state my review in words and phrases: "Inspiring", "shocking", "brilliant", "logical", "A must read for anyone who wants to understand this region". I highly recommend this book by Columbus Falco. Word of caution. Falco means to reveal so much about India that sections of it are graphic but had to be stated.

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Rabu, 15 Oktober 2014

[M295.Ebook] Download It: A Novel, by Stephen King

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It: A Novel, by Stephen King

Soon to be a major motion picture—from master storyteller Stephen King comes his classic #1 New York Times bestseller!

Can an entire city be haunted? The Losers’ Club of 1958 seems to think so. After all, when they were teenagers back then, these seven friends who called the small New England metropolis of Derry their home had first-hand experience with what made this place so horribly different. Every twenty-seven years, something that has existed here for a very long time comes back to terrorize Derry, lurking in the city storm drains and sewers, taking the shape of every nightmare and deepest dread. And yet, time passed and the children grew up, moved away...the horror of what they all experienced buried deep, wrapped in forgetfulness. Now nearly thirty years later, they’re all being called back to Derry for a final life-or-death confrontation with a primordial evil that stirs and coils in the sullen depths of their memories. For the Losers’ Club and the thing known only as “It” have some unfinished business with each other….

  • Sales Rank: #12879 in Books
  • Published on: 2016-11-29
  • Released on: 2016-11-29
  • Original language: English
  • Dimensions: 7.50" h x 2.20" w x 4.13" l, .0 pounds
  • Binding: Mass Market Paperback
  • 1488 pages

Amazon.com Review
They were seven teenagers when they first stumbled upon the horror. Now they were grown-up men and women who had gone out into the big world to gain success and happiness. But none of them could withstand the force that drew them back to Derry, Maine to face the nightmare without an end, and the evil without a name. What was it? Read It and find out...if you dare!

From Library Journal
The amazingly prolific King returns to pure horror, pitting good against evil as in The Stand and The Shining. Moving back and forth between 1958 and 1985, the story tells of seven children in a small Maine town who discover the source of a series of horrifying murders. Having conquered the evil force once, they are summoned together 27 years later when the cycle begins again. As usual, the requisite thrills are in abundance, and King's depiction of youngsters is extraordinarily accurate and sympathetic. But there is enough material in this epic for several novels and stories, and the excessive length and numerous interrelated flashbacks eventually become wearying and annoying. Nevertheless, King is a born storyteller, and It will undoubtedly be in high demand among his fans. BOMC main selection. Eric W. Johnson, Univ. of Bridgeport Lib., Ct.
Copyright 1986 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Review
“A mesmerizing odyssey of terror. . . . Dark and sinister.”� (―The Washington Post Book World)

“A great book. . . . A landmark in American literature.”� (―Chicago Sun-Times)

“The ultimate King epic . . . a whirlwind of horror!” (―USA Today)

Most helpful customer reviews

126 of 134 people found the following review helpful.
Even better the second time...a quarter of a century later.
By Adam John Zimmerman
When I was on a school field trip in the seventh grade, I took Stephen King's "IT" with me to read. The trip was going to be two days in Virginia, and was an example of staying overnight on a school trip. It should have been an adventure. The trip was frankly a waste, but the book was sublime.

I'd gotten into reading Stephen King two years before by way of a trip over the previous summer to my uncle's house. He had a collection of Stephen King novels and I'd started reading them with Pet Sematary, which had been adapted to the big screen two years before. In the intervening time, I'd devoured Salem's Lot, Carrie, Firestarter, and Misery, and The Shining. I found a copy of the 1990 TV movie adaptation and watched it. I recognized just how much I figured it had to have been toned down, but it was a decent primer (or so I thought). I felt warmed up and ready for the brick-like tome I'd acquired. I was wrong.

Reading the book was like a marathon, and I was prepared for a sprint. I easily identified with the younger versions of the characters, but had trouble with identifying with their adult incarnations. I appreciated the story and the implications of both eras, but entirely missed out on how well crafted the story was. In the end it took three weeks, but I completed the book, considered myself proud for conquering the nearly 1200 page tome, put it on the shelf, and...proceeded to put it out of my mind for nearly twenty five years. Almost, and entirely unintentionally, like the characters in the book...

Twenty five years later, I was on a kick of re-reading books I'd read as a kid, and then I approached Stephen King again. In the interim I'd devoured his books and probably thousands of other books by many dozens of different writers of differing skill levels, and when I thought "I should re-read some Stephen King" I thought about it, and it came down to either reading "IT" or "The Stand" and to be honest I felt "IT" was the better book. I remember it being a mountain for an adolescent. I wondered how I'd do this time.

It was SO MUCH better than I ever thought it would be!

I felt ACHINGLY nostalgic in the sections with the characters as kids. Whereas as a kid I identified with those elements as mapping directly onto my friends and setting, I did it unconsciously. Now I was (at times painfully) aware of it. I longed for the good times and friends of my youth. I appreciated how well King encapsulated the distance between childhood and adulthood and all the roads we travel in between. I reveled in how little we remember accurately about the past and how mutable it can be. I realized that IT was in fact two predators...both the eponymous monster who will kill and devour you, and the predator that robs us of our memories and the clarity we remember having as a kid.

The prose is wonderful. King doesn't use mere words to tell stories, he uses meanings themselves, woven seemingly seamlessly into shades of context and pigments of innuendo and occasionally bright, obvious splashes of unobfuscated emotion that jar you because...hey...in real life that's how it works. And in getting that right, King manages to make the impossible elements like the supernatural nature of IT and the relationship IT has with the town of Derry and the inhabitants there...normal. This could have happened. It could be happening. And it's that esoteric dread that King wields masterfully. The implications. The possibilities. Even in the fact that both eras are now, as of 2016, dated (the earlier phase was in the 50's, and the later phase was in the 80's...eerily we would be neck deep in the middle of the next cycle were it coming) was delightful. It was an added layer of nostalgia woven over the rest of the tapestry.

If you haven't read this book, read it now. Enjoy it. If you have read it, by all means read it again. It will thrill and delight and horrify and frighten you all over again.

4 of 4 people found the following review helpful.
I hate clowns!
By Lorena Merino
I just started reading this novel, I was so in love with the movie that I decided to read it. The book is super long about 1200 pages, very thick. Easy to read and scary as hell, some parts are not important but oh well. I love the cover

19 of 21 people found the following review helpful.
Massive book
By Trey Smith
One of King's most noteworthy and recognizable novels. It's fantastic.

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Selasa, 14 Oktober 2014

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Easy Japanese Pickling in Five Minutes to One Day: 101 Full-Color Recipes for Authentic Tsukemono, by Seiko Ogawa

Packed with 101 full-color recipes, this slim volume is the perfect introduction to Japanese pickling. Traditionally, many favorite Japanese pickling techniques take days or months. In this book, author Seiko Ogawa demonstrates new methods to make even nukazuke-pickles made in a rich-tasting base that traditionally took weeks to set up--in just one day.

Recipes include:
SPRING/SUMMER: Marinated Red Cabbage; Speedy Sauerkraut; Kimchee-Style Crosscut Cucumbers; Ginger-Miso Okra; Curried Cauliflower; Pickled Ginger for Sushi; Nukazuke

FALL/WINTER: Sesame Eggplant; Carrot Ribbons with Raisins; Thousand-Layer Turnips

SPECIAL: Strawberry Syrup (and Strawberry Cream Soda); Honey-Orange Syrup (and Orange Jelly); Wine-Honey Chicken Fritters; Spiced Vinegar; Rosemary Honey

For Japanese cooking enthusiasts who already own either book, our book will be a new, updated, refreshing addition to the library. It's the only one to focus on speedy pickles.

  • Sales Rank: #1569048 in Books
  • Brand: Brand: Japan Publications Trading
  • Published on: 2003-05-16
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: .24" h x 8.30" w x 10.12" l, .55 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 64 pages
Features
  • Used Book in Good Condition

From the Publisher
The traditional methods for making Japanese pickles often took days or even months to complete. Now, achieving the authentic taste of tsukemono no longer has to be so complicated or time-consuming. Japanese Pickling in Five Minutes to One Day is the only book to offer a variety of over 100 fast and easy seasonal recipes for the home cook.

For spring and summer there are favorites such as Marinated Red Cabbage, Speedy Sauerkraut, Curried Cauliflower, and Pickled Ginger for Sushi; while fall and winter include delights like Sesame Eggplant, Carrot Ribbons with Raisins, and Thousand-Layer Turnips. There are also special recipes for Strawberry Syrup, Wine-Honey Chicken Fritters, Spiced Vinegar, and much more.

About the Author

SEIKO OGAWA has written several Japanese cookbooks on streamlined techniques and quick ways to make delicious meals and desserts. She is a popular guest on Japanese television shows and her recipes are regularly featured in women's magazines.

Most helpful customer reviews

43 of 44 people found the following review helpful.
Great encyclopedia of Far Eastern pickles
By kittyworld
This book is full of color photos, not just of finished dishes, but of the main ingredients before cooking. This is especially helpful for those of us who are not Japanese and who do not know what a particular Japanese ingredient is. Of course many of these ingredients may not be available in regular supermarkets, but if you go to an Asian supermarket, especially a Japanese specialty store, you will find them there. Personally I never liked Western style pickles (too sour) so I am happy to find this book. I like to make them the night before so I have pickled vegetables the next morning for breakfast, along with hot cereal that's cooked overnight from a crock pot - I hate cooking for breakfast in the morning! These pickles are so refreshing they are great when eaten with a heavy, fatty dish, or as an appetizer. All recipes are very easy and some steps are even pictured in full color in case you are not sure about the procedure. There are also a few recipes that use pickles as ingredients.

33 of 33 people found the following review helpful.
perfect Japanese pickles
By Nikki Douglas
Before I became entranced by Japanese cuisine I had no idea how much pickles were a part of the experience. Since I've begun my education into Japanese food, I have been stunned by the sheer variety of tsukemono.

I made one of the quick cabbage pickles, which took about twenty minutes to have the best crisp, salty pickled cabbage I have ever eaten. I stood in the kitchen and ate it all! It was so delicious that I set about to make as many pickles as I could from the book.

All of them have been successful and tasty. I have impressed friends and family with my tsukemono - we eat them with everything - not just Japanese food. They make great accompaniment to picnic food and are perfect for bento box lunches.

This full color book is exquisite with photos for every recipe and photos on preparation too. I am so happy this was my first book on tsukemono, I am addicted!

26 of 27 people found the following review helpful.
Can't get any easier!
By M. Richards
The recipes are easy to follow. Some of the recipes have photos picturing specific steps of the recipes and all have the finished product photo. This book will also recommend different recipes & their page numbers for the originally called for main vegetable, which gives you a large variety of tsukemono recipes. There are also some suggestions on using the finished products in main dish recipes.

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Jumat, 10 Oktober 2014

[H707.Ebook] Get Free Ebook Do No Harm: Stories of Life, Death, and Brain Surgery, by Henry Marsh

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Do No Harm: Stories of Life, Death, and Brain Surgery, by Henry Marsh

Do No Harm: Stories of Life, Death, and Brain Surgery, by Henry Marsh



Do No Harm: Stories of Life, Death, and Brain Surgery, by Henry Marsh

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Do No Harm: Stories of Life, Death, and Brain Surgery, by Henry Marsh

Named a Notable Book of the Year by The New York Times Book Review and The Washington Post

What is it like to be a brain surgeon? How does it feel to hold someone’s life in your hands, to cut into the stuff that creates thought, feeling and reason? How do you live with the consequences of performing a potentially lifesaving operation when it all goes wrong?

With astonishing compassion and candor, leading neurosurgeon Henry Marsh reveals the fierce joy of operating, the profoundly moving triumphs, the harrowing disasters, the haunting regrets and the moments of black humor that characterize a brain surgeon’s life. Do No Harm provides unforgettable insight into the countless human dramas that take place in a busy modern hospital. Above all, it is a lesson in the need for hope when faced with life’s most difficult decisions.

  • Sales Rank: #8699 in Books
  • Published on: 2016-06-07
  • Released on: 2016-06-07
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: .33" h x .88" w x 5.06" l, .0 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 320 pages

Review

“Neurosurgery has met its Boswell in Henry Marsh. Painfully honest about the mistakes that can 'wreck' a brain, exquisitely attuned to the tense and transient bond between doctor and patient, and hilariously impatient of hospital management, Marsh draws us deep into medicine's most difficult art and lifts our spirits. It's a superb achievement.” ―Ian McEwan

“His love for brain surgery and his patients shines through, but the specialty--shrouded in secrecy and mystique when he entered it--has now firmly had the rug pulled out from under it. We should thank Henry Marsh for that.” ―The Times

“When a book opens like this: ‘I often have to cut into the brain and it is something I hate doing' – you can't let it go, you have to read on, don't you? Brain surgery, that's the most remote thing for me, I don't know anything about it, and as it is with everything I'm ignorant of, I trust completely the skills of those who practice it, and tend to forget the human element, which is failures, misunderstandings, mistakes, luck and bad luck, but also the non-professional, everyday life that they have. Do No Harm: Stories of Life, Death and Brain Surgery by Henry Marsh reveals all of this, in the midst of life-threatening situations, and that's one reason to read it; true honesty in an unexpected place. But there are plenty of others – for instance, the mechanical, material side of being, that we also are wire and strings that can be fixed, not unlike cars and washing machines, really.” ―Karl Ove Knausgaard, Financial Times

“"Do No Harm is a penetrating, in-the-trenches look at the life of a modern day neurosurgeon. With rare and unflinching honesty, Henry Marsh describes not only the soaring triumphs but the shattering tragedies that are so much a part of every surgeon's life. A remarkable achievement."” ―Michael J. Collins, author of Hot Lights, Cold Steel

“A soul-baring account of a practical-minded neurosurgeon who does not suffer fools or believe in souls, who favors ‘statistical outlier' over ‘miracle,' and who admits that a surgeon's ultimate achievement is marked by patients who ‘recover completely and forget us completely.' Readers, however, will not soon forget Dr. Marsh.” ―Katrina Firlik, author of Another Day in the Frontal Lobe: A Brain Surgeon Exposes Life on the Inside

“"Do No Harm is a fascinating look into the reality of life as a neurosurgeon. The personal patient stories are gripping, providing the public with an incredibly candid look into the imperfections and perfections of a dedicated neurosurgeon. In Do No Harm, Dr. Marsh takes the reader into deep into a world of life, death, and everything in between. Despite it all, Dr. Marsh's commitment to his patients and his profession never wavers. You will not be able to put this book down."” ―Paul Ruggieri M.D., surgeon and author of Confessions of a Surgeon and The Cost of Cutting

“"Do No Harm dares to reveal the raw and tender humanity behind brain surgery. Each story invites readers into the private thoughts of a neurosurgeon and astonishes them with the counterintuitive compassion required in the operating room."” ―Michael Paul Mason, author of Head Cases

“"Henry Marsh peels back the meninges to reveal the glistening, harrowing, and utterly compelling world of neurosurgery. Top-notch medical writing." --Danielle Ofri, MD, PhD, author of What Doctors Feel: How Emotions Affect the Practice of Medicine "The outstanding feature of Do No Harm is the author's completely candid description of the highs and lows of a neurosurgical career. … For its unusual and admirable candor, wisdom and humor, Do No Harm is a smashing good read from which the most experienced and the most junior neurosurgeons have much to learn." ” ―AANS Neurosurgeon

“This thoughtful doctor provides a highly personal and fascinating look inside the elite world of neurosurgery, appraising both its amazing successes as well as its sobering failures.” ―Publishers Weekly (Starred Review)

“Like the work of his fellow physicians Jerome Groopman and Atul Gawande, Do No Harm offers insight into the life of doctors and the quandaries they face as we throw our outsize hopes into their fallible hands.” ―The Washington Post

“Riveting. ... [Marsh] gives us an extraordinarily intimate, compassionate and sometimes frightening understanding of his vocation.” ―The New York Times

“The Knausgaard of neurosurgery. ... Marsh writes like a novelist.” ―The New Yorker

“A surprising page-turner, Do No Harm is British neurosurgeon Henry Marsh's mesmerizing memoir of his career highlights and low points, a fascinating blend of derring-do and humble pie. ... Marsh's prose is elegant and seasoned, with no false bravado. ... Marsh's gift for words helps him share his sense of wonder with his readers.” ―Seattle Times

“There's no denying the vicarious thrill of peeking over a neurosurgeon's shoulder in the operating theater, and Dr. Marsh delivers plenty of hospital drama. Yet what sticks with you are the moments when the lens flips and the field of view widens, and you realize that, in learning about the minutiae of neurosurgery, you're gaining insight into life itself.” ―The Wall Street Journal

“One of the best books ever about a life in medicine, Do No Harm boldly and gracefully exposes the vulnerability and painful privilege of being a physician.” ―Booklist (starred review)

About the Author
Henry Marsh studied medicine at the Royal Free Hospital in London, became a Fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons in 1984, and was appointed Consultant Neurosurgeon at Atkinson Morley's/St George's Hospital in London in 1987. He has been the subject of two major documentary films, Your Life in Their Hands, which won the Royal Television Society Gold Medal, and The English Surgeon, which won an Emmy. He is married to the anthropologist and writer Kate Fox.

Most helpful customer reviews

171 of 173 people found the following review helpful.
Most neurosurgeon’s lives are punctuated by periods of deep despair
By BrianB
This book is well written, gripping, and fascinating. Sometimes it is sad or gruesome. It is accurate in the descriptions of medical details, surgical procedures, and the life of brain surgeons. If you like to think of your physician as a demi-god you should not read this book. If you can handle the truth, read on.

As an anesthesiologist, I read with a mix of amusement and rueful resignation. Dr. Marsh is a true representative of his species, the neurosurgeon. They are by turns kind, irritating, cocky, courageous, arrogant, brilliant, obsessive, awe-inspiring, and lonely. They usually graduated at the top of their medical school class. Their residency did not end until they were well into their 30’s. Many hospitals have lots of pediatricians, intensivists, internists, and hospitalists, but they only have one neurosurgeon. Even in a field of doctors, a collection of brainy nerds, they stand alone.

Their arrogance is undeniable. Henry Marsh relates how he was stuck in a line of shoppers at the grocery store and thinks with irritation that none of them could do what he just did today, so why does he have to wait behind them? Like fighter pilots or Special Forces, society is not comfortable with such people, but when we need them, we need them desperately. And we always need them.

There is a moment before every invasive medical procedure when you could pause and contemplate the enormous consequences of failure. If you spend too much time doing that, you will end up paralyzed, and the patient will suffer. If you spend too much time thinking about the appalling human carnage that will result from surgery gone wrong, you will never take up the knife. No matter how skillful, knowledgeable, and careful you are, there will be carnage. No one knows this better than the neurosurgeon. To cut into a human brain takes enormous hubris. Every procedure includes the risk of death, but there are worse things than death. Most doctors will see worse-than-death only rarely during their career, but the neurosurgeon sees it often. It is the nature of their specialty. It is beyond extreme. For example, I induce a death-like coma in my patients daily, then rescue them from it. Yet I could not abide such a life of enormous risk.

Dr. Marsh is a writer of depth and skill. He probably does everything well, if he does it at all. If you think that neurosurgery is fascinating, you should read this book.

2 of 2 people found the following review helpful.
Fascinating, captivating, and not too anatomically dense. Easy read for the curious.
By Kyle William
Why you'll love this book:

Dr. Henry Marsh does a terrific job of tackling incredibly dense subjects (neuroscience/neurosurgery) and structuring his memoir in incredibly intriguing, elegant, and fascinating ways. Out of curiosity, I've tried to tackle books that explain the brain and its operations in the past, only to become overwhelmed by the complexity of the anatomical references. Perhaps because these are written by academics, I've yet to finish a book. It is important to remember that Dr. Marsh is a surgeon and thus has a history of explaining these complexities to patients and those with less expertise in the field. This allows him to draft a splendid memoir of mistakes, loss, triumphs, etc. from his career. In my favorite passage, Dr. Marsh explains a typical aneurism procedure with such beautiful allegory of a knight in shining armor darting through the sections of the brain off on a hunt for a mythical beast.

Why You Won't Love This Book:
There is a bit of detail when it comes to the surgical procedures that may make those with a weak stomach squirm. There is undoubtably stories of loss of life that are quite tragic as well. I also want to point out that this book is a memoir at heart and doesn't really leave the reader with any sort of leadership learnings.

3 of 3 people found the following review helpful.
It Is Brain Surgery
By V. coppola
Want to break through the blood/brain barrier? Grab a copy of "Do No Harm: Stories of Life, Death and Brain Surgery,"
Written by the crustiest, crankiest, most brilliant British surgeon imaginable, Dr. Henry Marsh. He takes you inside the human brain both physically and intellectually, through a 40-year series of insanely complex and riveting microsurgeries (usually Marsh battling from his Star Wars-style deck to circumvent some overwhelmingly horrible cancer, infection, stroke or hemorrhage). The language is simple and utterly revealing; the parade of souls who parade through his theater (his own mother among them) heartbreaking; the complexities of human consciousness (and the loss of it) laid bare. This goddam book is so compelling I was forced to dump my two month-long obsession with Jo Nesbo’s Harry Hole thrillers to plunge in.

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