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After Kilimanjaro

A Novel

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Dr. Sarah Whitaker has always been an obedient overachiever, but she is burned out. Training to be a surgeon is stressful. So when her fiancé, David, offers a solution—take a break year at a hospital in Africa and climb Mount Kilimanjaro together—she jumps on board. When he backs out, she embarks on the adventure alone.
Sarah quickly falls in love with Tanzania, a land of gentle people, exotic wildlife, and stunning natural beauty, from the sands of Zanzibar to the peaks of Kilimanjaro. She also develops great respect for new Tanzanian friends: strong African women who strive to serve an overwhelming need for health care. Shocked by the high rate of maternal mortality and the scourge of female genital mutilation in the country, Sarah begins to speak out against FGM and develops an experimental program to train tribal birth attendants in a remote mountain village. Conditions are primitive there, and life is fragile. The separation takes its toll on her relationship with David, and she fights against feelings for another man. As the months pass, one thing becomes clear: if Sarah survives this year, her life will never be the same again.
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    • Kirkus

      August 1, 2019
      A physician from Philadelphia experiences a new life in Africa in Woodson's (Adios Amarillo, 2018, etc.) novel. Young doctor Sarah Whitaker is as naïve about love as she is idealistic about medicine. She's engaged to a physician named David, who's the only boyfriend she's ever had. In their nearly six years together, he's often been the decision-maker in the relationship. They prepare to go to Africa so that David can work on a malaria vaccine project, but then the funding evaporates. "We'll just have to wait to go to Africa...someday when we're rich doctors," he says. That triggers hidden mettle in Sarah, who decides to go overseas now--with or without him. She's already accepted a scholarship to research maternal mortality in childbirth, a scourge in sub-Saharan Africa, and she feels duty-bound to keep her word. When she gets there, she begins to wonder whether her shifting feelings about David provided the real motivation for her to go. The vivid portrayals of the African landscape read like a travelogue, and the operating scenes are graphically realistic (Woodson is a throat surgeon). As one point, a disfigured patient is described as "a Picasso portrait--as if some tectonic rift had shifted the halves of her face." Sarah delivers babies under conditions that would rattle a very experienced obstetrician, which she is not; she also encounters a black mamba, which is described as the deadliest snake in Africa, and she even contracts red-eye fever. She also connects with Pieter Meijer, a Dutch anesthesiologist, who causes her to question her devotion to David. Not until the final pages does the word "after" in the book's title make sense: It's less about Sarah's time in Africa than about who she's become after she leaves. An engagingly written story of a woman's transformation that's begging for a sequel.

      COPYRIGHT(2019) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      September 15, 2019
      Dr. Sarah Whitaker, a surgical resident, travels to Tanzania to spend a year working for a nonprofit focused on preventing maternal mortality. The trip was intended to include her fianc�, David, but when the funding for his malaria research falls through, Sarah makes the journey to a doctors' compound at the base of Mt. Kilimanjaro solo. Her adjustment to the new place is eased by Dr. Margo Ledama, a fellow surgeon-in-training, and Dr. Pieter Meijer, an anesthesiologist. Friendships quickly form, and as Sarah becomes more confident in her surgical abilities, her perspective on her future changes, leaving her unsure of her relationship with David?complicated by her growing attraction to Pieter. Woodson deftly balances Sarah's story of self-discovery with medical drama, interspersing individual patients' stories into the larger narrative. The characters are well-developed, and the medical cases are fascinating to read, especially when the stakes are high. Medical fiction of this kind is rare?it's not a thriller or a tearjerker, but a thoughtful novel about doctors, the work they do, and the impact this work has on their patients and the communities they serve.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2019, American Library Association.)

    • Kirkus

      August 1, 2019
      A physician from Philadelphia experiences a new life in Africa in Woodson's (Adios Amarillo, 2018, etc.) novel. Young doctor Sarah Whitaker is as na�ve about love as she is idealistic about medicine. She's engaged to a physician named David, who's the only boyfriend she's ever had. In their nearly six years together, he's often been the decision-maker in the relationship. They prepare to go to Africa so that David can work on a malaria vaccine project, but then the funding evaporates. "We'll just have to wait to go to Africa...someday when we're rich doctors," he says. That triggers hidden mettle in Sarah, who decides to go overseas now--with or without him. She's already accepted a scholarship to research maternal mortality in childbirth, a scourge in sub-Saharan Africa, and she feels duty-bound to keep her word. When she gets there, she begins to wonder whether her shifting feelings about David provided the real motivation for her to go. The vivid portrayals of the African landscape read like a travelogue, and the operating scenes are graphically realistic (Woodson is a throat surgeon). As one point, a disfigured patient is described as "a Picasso portrait--as if some tectonic rift had shifted the halves of her face." Sarah delivers babies under conditions that would rattle a very experienced obstetrician, which she is not; she also encounters a black mamba, which is described as the deadliest snake in Africa, and she even contracts red-eye fever. She also connects with Pieter Meijer, a Dutch anesthesiologist, who causes her to question her devotion to David. Not until the final pages does the word "after" in the book's title make sense: It's less about Sarah's time in Africa than about who she's become after she leaves. An engagingly written story of a woman's transformation that's begging for a sequel.

      COPYRIGHT(2019) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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