Booktopia offers thousands of eBooks, daily discounted books and flat rate shipping of 7.95 per online book order. This assemblage of so many different voices exemplifies the varied paths that women have created within the medical profession. Booktopia - buy online books, DVDs and Magazine Subscriptions from Australias leading online bookstore with over 4 million titles. Much like an American quilt, this book is a unique and richly textured patchwork of each woman’s extraordinary life and career. But every time the day begins again, Aiden wakes up in the body of a different. Evelyn Hardcastle will die every day until he can identify her killer and break the cycle. Poignant and compelling, these narratives offer insights into the struggles and triumphs of women in medicine. Books similar to The 7 Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle. There are touching testimonies from early 19th-century medical pioneers like Elizabeth Blackwell, the first woman to graduate from medical school and Harriet Hunt, who had her own practice that catered to women and children yet was never formally trained, to modern-day medical students and doctors. “Written over the last century and a half, this collection of personal stories, poems, essays, and quotations reveals the intimate lives of over a hundred female physicians. I could read this over and over and over. They’re mostly books about medicine that are nonfiction, with fiction marked with a (*) and forthcoming books marked (**). I like to think that if you devour reruns of ER and House, that you’ll like these, too. Here, in no particular order, are 50 must-read and best medical books. But I still love reading about medicine, doctoring, and anything in the medical field in medical books. At this point, I have accepted that my graduate school loans are sizable enough, and my life no longer has room for the possibility of ever going to medical school – and besides, when I did take some prerequisites, although I love reading medical textbooks, my brain just does not like rote memorization…which is a problem in the biological sciences. My not-so-secret desire to be a doctor, though, has never really gone away. My love of medicine and people propelled me toward psychology, then public health, where I could combine everything into fields like psychosocial oncology and perinatal psychology. As a preteen, I wanted to be a pediatric oncologist, a dream that continues today. Silent Spring, Rachel Carson’s landmark warning about the indiscriminate use of pesticides, turns 50 this month.