Citizen-Surgeon
A Memoir
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Narrated by:
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Paul Bryan Roach
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Emmett Schrader
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By:
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Paul Bryan Roach
Citizen-Surgeon takes listeners into the otherwise inaccessible, remote, and intense world of life and surgery within a combat zone. In the backdrop of the US-led war in Afghanistan, amid a defining US Marine Corps’ offensive to conquer the Marjah region of Helmand Province, [then] US Navy Commander Paul Roach and his company-mates assemble and congeal as a medical unit in Southern California, transport from the United States to their tents in Dasht-e-Margo (the “Desert of Death”) in Helmand Province, Afghanistan, and professionally execute their role as one of the few medical and surgical companies supporting this major offensive.
In the course of the book’s events, the author undergoes a transformation from being a physician in a military uniform into a military officer that happens to be a physician. The crucible effecting this change is the military offensive and his role within it. Shocking and intense, an array of critical injuries and their treatments are described in rich language that anyone, medical or nonmedical alike, can absorb. Death also pervades the atmosphere; intrusive, unyielding, and painful, its battlefield familiarity and personal impact is resisted, suffered, and ultimately, accepted.
Citizen-Surgeon is an intimate portrayal; a chronicle; a celebration of friendship, love, success, and failure; contemporary war; and military medicine. It is an account of a slice of reality that few people are privileged to know. It reflects deeply upon the nature of personal choice and how that choice puts us where we are in life, even if we did not fully see in advance how the choice would change us. Citizen-Surgeon also explores a variant of post-traumatic stress particular to medical assets, and it reveals one man’s chess match against it. It is a must-listen for those with a specific interest in contemporary military medicine, and for those with broader, essentially human interests in individual growth, adventure, and self-actualization.
©2016 Paul Bryan Roach (P)2021 Rogues Gallery, LLCListeners also enjoyed...
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Who had to deploy and leave my family behind. In support of the Infantry Battalion’s and like the Arthur HMM 265 different year and different Navy Ships. I was on the USS New Orleans (LPH-11) in 1995.
Like the author I remember my second deployment six month on a Naval Ship USS Boxer 1997 my wife was pregnant with our first child how hard it was as the ship pulled away from the pier at 32nd Street San Diego knowing that I would not see her again until my deployment was over.
Of course that was not my first deployment I was deployed to Iraq twice in support of an Infantry Battalion. It was a group of us one officer, 5 Marines , and myself the only difference was we did know some of the Marines and Sailors which made it harder but we still did our best to support them By ensuring that the service members got paid what they rated, received the mail that the love ones and friends sent and other administrative duties.
Like the author i missed my family allot but was lucky to have the support like he did and made my job allot easier.
Sometimes I am ask how it is to serve in the military and I tell them that is a great filling you get to see the world and serve your country and in my case take your family with me Okinawa, Japan. With that said when you sign that contract you have make sure that this is what you want to do. Because once you are in and you change your mind it is along process that you go through to be discharge before your contract has ended and sometimes the discharge is not a favorable one.
Now that I am retired would I do it again the answer is yes because I got to serve my country and with some awesome service members who I still keep in touch with.
Semper Fi sir and thank you very much for writing this awesome book.
I can relate
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Moved Me Deeply, Listened Straight Thru
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Highly recommended!
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Puts sacrifice in perspective
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