
At the same time, the book explores everything from ancient conceptions of the mind to the most cutting-edge neurological―and bioethical―research. Though the conflicts are personal, they are also universal-conversations and conflicts that every family facing the mental erosion of an elder has.

The book relates the complications that arise when family members must become caregivers. In the book, Jauhar sets his father’s descent into Alzheimer’s alongside his own journey toward understanding his father’s disease.

His latest book, "My Father’s Brain," published in April 2023, is a memoir of his relationship with his father as he succumbed to dementia. Sandeep Jauhar has written several bestselling books, all published by Farrar, Straus, and Giroux.

Affecting, engaging, and beautifully written, Heart: A History takes the full measure of the only organ that can move itself. He also confronts the limits of medical technology, arguing that future progress will depend more on how we choose to live than on the devices we invent. Jauhar deftly braids these tales of discovery, hubris, and sorrow with moving accounts of his family’s history of heart ailments and the patients he’s treated over many years. And we encounter Wilson Greatbatch, who saved millions by inventing the pacemaker-by accident.

Walton Lillehei, who connected a patient’s circulatory system to a healthy donor’s, paving the way for the heart-lung machine. He introduces us to Daniel Hale Williams, the African American doctor who performed the world’s first open heart surgery in Gilded Age Chicago. As the cardiologist and bestselling author Sandeep Jauhar shows in Heart: A History, it was only recently that we demolished age-old taboos and devised the transformative procedures that have changed the way we live.ĭeftly alternating between key historical episodes and his own work, Jauhar tells the colorful and little-known story of the doctors who risked their careers and the patients who risked their lives to know and heal our most vital organ. The bestselling author of Intern and Doctored tells the story of the thing that makes us tickįor centuries, the human heart seemed beyond our understanding: an inscrutable shuddering mass that was somehow the driver of emotion and the seat of the soul.
