Archives By Month: May 2017

The American Conservatory Theatre: Dead Metaphor

Posted on May 29, 2017 1:23 pm By Del Meyer in Book & Cinematic Reviews

A.C.T. Presents the World Premiere of George F. Walker’s Hilarious Political Comedy Dead Metaphor February 28 to March 24, 2013 Directed by Irene Lewis, this dark comedy–from one of Canada’s most acclaimed playwrights–satirizes the hypocrisies and politics of postwar living A soldier returns from the Middle East to find work in this audacious and hilarious […]

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Love In The Time Of Algorithms

Posted on May 29, 2017 1:22 pm By Del Meyer in Book & Cinematic Reviews

Online dating is awash with deviance. There are perverts, scammers and misanthropic entrepreneurs all hellbent on profiting from loneliness. But then there are women like Laura Brashier, a 37-year-old hairdresser from California and a survivor of cervical cancer. Her treatment left Ms Brashier unable to have sex. Rather than endure the anxiety of conventional dating […]

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Movie Review: By James J. Murtagh, M.D.

Posted on May 29, 2017 1:22 pm By Del Meyer in Book & Cinematic Reviews

“Breaking Bad”: Character is Fate Meth-cooking Walt reaches new height of art: No Excuses Warning:  spoiler alert. If you have not seen the final episode of  Breaking Bad, do not read further. The episode contains a major plot twist which is discussed in this Op- Ed. It is fiendishly appropriate that the modern Greek tragedy, […]

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Handbook On State Health Care Reform

Posted on May 29, 2017 1:21 pm By Del Meyer in Book & Cinematic Reviews

by John C. Goodman, PhD Chapter 2: PRINCIPLES OF REFORM What are the principles of health reform? One might suppose they are fairly easy to enumerate and command widespread support. As it turns out, that is not the case. Here are five recommended principles. If they are followed, the odds of successful health policy reform […]

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A Tale Of Two Steve’s

Posted on May 29, 2017 1:20 pm By Del Meyer in Book & Cinematic Reviews

Sonoma Medicine The magazine of the Sonoma County Medical Association CURRENT BOOKS By Rick Flinders, MD Steve Jobs, by Walter Isaacson, Simon & Schuster, 656 pages. Perhaps the first clue to how much Steve Jobs thought of himself is his choice of biographer: Walter Isaacson, the same man who wrote biographies of Albert Einstein and […]

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What Doctors Feel: How Emotions Affect The Practice Of Medicine

Posted on May 29, 2017 1:20 pm By Del Meyer in Book & Cinematic Reviews

by Danielle Ofri, MD Sonoma Medicine | The magazine of the Sonoma County Medical Association CURRENT BOOKS: Hoping for More: a review by Deborah Donlon, MD It seems the American public is yearning to figure out what makes doctors tick. First came How Doctors Think (2008) by Dr. Jerome Groopman, followed by What Doctors Feel […]

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The Lost Cause: The Trials Of Frank And Jesse James

Posted on May 29, 2017 1:19 pm By Del Meyer in Book & Cinematic Reviews

by James Muehlberger, Esq, Kansas Alumni Magazine, No 3, 2014 True Crime A lawyer’s successful search for a missing court case sets straight the crooked tale of Frank and Jesse James By Steven Hill “The Ballad of Jesse James” Jesse James we understand Has killed many a man He robbed the Union trains He stole […]

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The Bookshelf By Barton Swaim, WSJ

Posted on May 29, 2017 1:19 pm By Del Meyer in Book & Cinematic Reviews

Book Review: ‘Poems That Make Grown Men Cry,’ edited by Anthony and Ben Holden You don’t need a degree in creative writing to be brought to tears by verse. Terry George, the Irish screenwriter and director, chokes up whenever he reads Seamus Heaney’s “Requiem for the Croppies.” The sonnet is an acutely condensed retelling of […]

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Gulp: Adventures On The Alimentary Canal

Posted on May 29, 2017 1:18 pm By Del Meyer in Book & Cinematic Reviews

By Mary Roach CURRENT BOOKS: Chewing the Fat By Jeff Sugarman, MD Gulp, the new book by science writer/humorist Mary Roach, offers an entertaining if somewhat meandering and tangential tour of the alimentary canal. From top to bottom Roach takes us to places we never knew existed, and she digs down deeply into the often […]

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The WSJ Bookshelf By Barton Swaim

Posted on May 29, 2017 1:18 pm By Del Meyer in Book & Cinematic Reviews

Book Review: ‘Sorry About That’ by Edwin L. Battistella The typical public apology purports to be an expression of regret and self-reproach, but in fact is meant to defend and justify Public apologies might not be so nauseating if there weren’t so many of them: Corporations apologize for real and imagined misdeeds; celebrities apologize for […]

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