In the book the relationship with Katharine and Almasy is sort of only in the patient's mind.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
And it's sort of an old-fashioned ER, in that it's very much about the medicine, and how these people cope. There's very little about the personal lives of the characters.
I feel upsettingly de-natured. If Penelope Cruz were one of my nurses, I wouldn't even notice.
There was a different ending to 'New Moon' originally. It was a much quieter book. It was very much all in Bella's head.
I admire those women who really knew who they were and didn't apologize for it. Katharine Hepburn? She was ahead of her time.
I advocate for a totally new view of the role of the patient: patient as engaged partner, not passive recipient.
I'd like to think Helen very much understood what it was to be disadvantaged in the medical field. And that that was something that she never let dictate her choices.
I fell in love with Neil's pain. We were in this cocoon of intensity. Neil and I were uniquely in the same position at the same time, having overwhelming success facing us.
I have an emotional attachment with Katihar.
Each reader projects their own version of the experience inside their skull as they go along. It's probably true that no two people read exactly the same book.
When you read 'author Katharine Holabird, creator of Angelina' and you're not even mentioned, you wince.