“What a terrific book….[Weston] leaves you feeling that if push came to shove you’d want to be operated on by her.” —Nicholas Shakespeare, author of Bruce Chatwin: A Biography The continuing popularity of doctor shows on TV—from Scrubs , House , and Grey’s Anatomy to the television phenomenon ER —indicates a widespread fascination with all things medical. Direct Red, by practicing ear, nose, and throat surgical specialist Gabriel Weston, takes readers behind the scenes and into the operating room for a fascinating look at what really goes on on the other side of the hospital doors. “A Surgeon’s View of her Life-and-Death Profession,” Weston’s Direct Red is written not only with knowledge and insight, but with compassion, honesty, and literary flair. “Gabriel Weston’s exactitude of expression is rare and uncanny, the more so for the sense one gets that this is a world in which the moral value of truthfulness is ambiguous. Her description of the struggle to remain individual and hence moral is her real achievement. This, to me, is what female writing has to do, and she does it with style and humor and beauty.” - Rachel Cusk, author of A Life’s Work “Stark. . . . painfully vivid. . . . superbly honest. . . . A valuable and unflinching account, for all its grimness and gruesomeness, since it so clearly tells the truth.” - Christopher Hart, Sunday Times (London) “Spare, arresting prose. . . . Weston is acutely aware…of the less than edifying transactions that sometimes occur between doctors and patients. She examines these with an honesty that is both brave and uncomfortable.” - Phil Whitaker, The Guardian (London) “Concise, literate, truthful . . . moving. . . . As well-written and sensitive an account . . . of the glories and miseries of the practice of medicine as you are likely ever to read.” - Anthony Daniels, Literary Review (London) “Compelling. . . . Dazzling. . . . A curiously thrilling read, written with an elegance of expression heighted by both its clarity and economy…. The conflict between these opposing forces―personal and professional, female and male, patient and physician, pain and relief―makes Direct Red extraordinarily gripping.” - Elizabeth Day, The Observer (London) Surgeons have long been known for their allergy to doubt, an unsurprising trait in professionals who must play God, routinely risking someone else's life to do their job. But in this illuminating memoir, Gabriel Weston reveals the emotions, passions, and doubts normally hidden behind a surgeon's mask. Interweaving her own story with those of her patients, old and young, Weston evokes both the humor and the heartbreak that come from medicine's daily confrontation with the ultimate unknowability of the human body. With prose that does not flinch from the raw, graphic realities of a surgeon's day, Weston confronts life, death, and the unique difficulties of being a female surgeon in a heavily male-dominated profession. Educated in the United Kingdom and the United States, Gabriel Weston studied English literature at Edinburgh University before attending medical school in London. She went on to become a member of the Royal College of Surgeons and is a part-time ear, nose, and throat surgical specialist. She lives in London with her husband and two children.