
Jonathan Kaplan (1) (1956–)
Author of The Dressing Station: A Surgeon's Chronicle of War and Medicine
For other authors named Jonathan Kaplan, see the disambiguation page.
About the Author
Jonathan Kaplan was born in South Africa. He studied medicine in Cape Town before specializing in the United Kingdom and America. After ten years of clinical experience and research work he left the secure career of hospital surgery to travel as a doctor, journalist, and documentary filmmaker
Works by Jonathan Kaplan
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Birthdate
- 1956
- Gender
- male
- Nationality
- South Africa
- Associated Place (for map)
- South Africa
Members
Reviews
Jonathan Kaplan trained as a doctor in Durban, South Africa and then left for London rather than serve in an army dedicated to upholding apartheid.
But he never settled, neither in his career nor in his soul. His existential angst led him to work on the frontline of wars across the world and eventually into documentary film-making exposing the horrors of armed conflict.
Kaplan is most at peace in the Homelands of South Africa treating the poorest of the poor with the most disgusting of show more diseases, these people he regards as his compatriots. Every now and again there is a diversion from his stressful choice of career as when he serves as a cruise ship surgeon aboard a rust bucket bobbing around the South China seas or is up the Amazon investigating mercury poisoning.
But it is the ending, the last page and a half that illustrates Kaplan's supreme humanity when he links the richest and the poorest through the body's common responses to stress, something he knows about from many angles. As he writes the final words, perfect words, its the 'ahh' moment, the moment you understand, we are all the same.
Rewritten 25 March 2013 show less
But he never settled, neither in his career nor in his soul. His existential angst led him to work on the frontline of wars across the world and eventually into documentary film-making exposing the horrors of armed conflict.
Kaplan is most at peace in the Homelands of South Africa treating the poorest of the poor with the most disgusting of show more diseases, these people he regards as his compatriots. Every now and again there is a diversion from his stressful choice of career as when he serves as a cruise ship surgeon aboard a rust bucket bobbing around the South China seas or is up the Amazon investigating mercury poisoning.
But it is the ending, the last page and a half that illustrates Kaplan's supreme humanity when he links the richest and the poorest through the body's common responses to stress, something he knows about from many angles. As he writes the final words, perfect words, its the 'ahh' moment, the moment you understand, we are all the same.
Rewritten 25 March 2013 show less
Part travel writing, part confession, part reporting and part dissection of different aspects of the medical profession, Dr Kaplan's book is a whirlwind tour from one intense crisis spot to another. For the most part his tone is clinical and coolly professional, but beneath the businesslike writing is a book of enormous, conflicted emotions. Certainly not the cheeriest of reads.
Interesting first-person account; not very polished writing.
Awards
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Statistics
- Works
- 2
- Members
- 240
- Popularity
- #94,568
- Rating
- 3.5
- Reviews
- 3
- ISBNs
- 54
- Languages
- 3












