cover image Living and Dying in Brick City: An E.R. Doctor Returns Home.

Living and Dying in Brick City: An E.R. Doctor Returns Home.

Sampson Davis with Lisa Frazier Page. Random/Spiegel & Grau, $25 (250p) ISBN 978-1-4000-6994-1

Davis (co-author of The Pact: Three Young Men Make a Promise and Fulfill a Dream) is clearly of, from, and for the Brick City%E2%80%94Newark, NJ%E2%80%94and in his previous book and work with his Three Doctors Foundation he made himself an inspiration to the kind of inner-city youth he was. Now writing about the urban African-American experience on the scale of Newark and the United States simultaneously, it is unclear whom Davis envisions as his audience. Identically-structured chapters feature a short patient story, a teaching point or moral, major issues in health and health care for African Americans, and concise public health information from government agencies. Though formulaic, patients are not made tokens, and medical information%E2%80%94dealing with topics ranging from gang violence to depression to obesity%E2%80%94 is woven throughout. The most fully developed character, however, is Davis himself; he details his childhood, family, and life with both his own child and "adopted" children he has mentored in the community. Davis closes by discussing his leave from clinical medicine for full-time community and advocacy work, reflecting on how it's all part of the same vocation: to "help save lives". (Feb.)