courtesy of NYU library
having the biggest collection with books of (english) Writing Physicians, he donated it to New York University!
http://library.med.nyu.edu/library/eresources/featuredcollections/bryant/bryant.html
Born in Cincinnati, Ohio in 1939, Dr. Bryant completed his undergraduate degree
in French literature at Princeton University in 1961, graduated from Columbia
University College of Physicians and Surgeon in 1965 and completed an Internal
Medicine residency at the Maine Medical Center in Portland from 1966-1969.
From 1979 to 1971, Dr. Bryant was in the United States Navy, and later went on
to a successful general internal medicine practice in Portland, Maine from 1971
to 1999.
Questions and Answers with Dr. Bryant
Why he became interested in physician-writers
I first became interested in doctors' non-medical writing about twenty years ago, wondering what doctors, with all their education and exposure to "life" thought was worth writing about. Some names (Maugham, Williams, etc.) came to mind right away, but others I found looking through references like "Contemporary Authors;" reading books like Dana's "Poetry and the Doctors," McDonough's "Poet Physicians," Trautmann and Pollard's "Literature and Medicine," issues of "Literature and Medicine;" and quizzing secondhand book store owners. The books themselves came from secondhand bookstores in the States and England, at first from actual visits, then from catalogues, and more recently the Internet.
Favorites in the collection?
I guess the Williams first editions, and perhaps Alex Comfort's "Silver River,"
his first book, written, I think, when he was still in his teens.
Dr. Bryant's Writings
Poetry
Literary magazines – The Café Review, Kennebec, Northern New England
Review, Potato Eyes
Medical journals – Annals of Internal Medicine, Archives of Internal Medicine,
JAMA, Journal of General Internal Medicine, Journal of Medical Humanities, The
Western Journal of Medicine
Fiction
“Home free,” Bellevue Literary Review 3, No. 1 (2003): 127-134
Essays
“A roster of twentieth-century physicians writing in English,”
Literature and Medicine 13, No. 2 (1994): 284-305
“Telling tales out of school – Portrayals of the medical student experience by
physician-novelists,” Journal of Medical Humanities 17, No. 4 (1996): 237-254
“Hospitalists and officists: Preparing for the future of General Internal
Medicine,” Journal of General Internal Medicine 14 (1999): 182-185
Crossword Puzzles
Los Angeles Times, November 1, 2003
New York Times, April 22, 2004
See the roster of WriterDocs
or have a look directly on the page with resumes of all the WriterDocs, most interesting glimpse into literature history!
His entire collection as database online click here
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