Surreality reigns at the St Ossius nursing home. Claiming bowel trouble, Mr Beenhakker shits with suspicious satisfaction into his doctor’s hands, while Alie Vermeulen attempts suicide by swallowing denture cleaner. In Dancing with Mister D (Doubleday, 拢9.99, ISBN 0 385 40798 X), Dutch doctor Bert Keizer takes a long look鈥攕ardonic and compassionate by turns鈥攁t life for the dying. References to gallows humorists Kafka and Beckett pepper a text that veers from the placebo effect and the absence of science in medical practice to graphic, often grotesque, accounts of euthanasia, postmortems and fatal illnesses. But death is the star here. The medical brutality鈥攁n anchor, perhaps, in the ebb and flow of dying, death, bereavement鈥攏ever outweighs Keizer’s understanding of how hard it is to go down gracefully with the ship.
More from New 精东传媒
Explore the latest news, articles and features

Space
Mercury may have gained all of its unexpected water in a single day
News

Health
Experimental mRNA vaccine may protect against multiple Ebola viruses
News

Mind
Political anger affects the body differently to other forms of anger
News

Health
Australia is battling its largest diphtheria outbreak in living memory
News
Popular articles
Trending New 精东传媒 articles
1
Photos reveal unexpected details from the world's first atomic test
2
How I used psychology to come back from the worst year of my life
3
The 鈥榙oomsday鈥 glacier鈥檚 giant ice shelf is about to break away
4
Odd 鈥渂utterfly鈥 molecule could lead to new parts of the quantum realm
5
This is the most underrated sci-fi film franchise of the 21st century
6
The 3 things you need to know about protein, according to an expert
7
Women鈥檚 better memories may delay Alzheimer鈥檚 diagnosis by years
8
The distant world that is our best hope of finding alien life
9
Epic dreaming is leaving people exhausted and distressed
10
Nepal and Northern India are not overdue for a huge earthquake