Linda Weltner,
The Boston Globe
Conscientious, idealistic and too hard working for her own good,
Kate Genovese takes us through the training, the joys and sorrows,
and the eventual disillusionment of a dedicated caretaker, entertaining
us with her delightful tales as well as saddening us with her
thoughtful conclusions.
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Thirty
Years
in September
A Nurse's Memoir

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When
sixteen year old kate genovese went to visit her sister denise
in the hospital in 1968, she claims "something clicked that
very moment, I wanted to make Denise better again, heal her shattered
body and make her laugh... I couldn't put wods to my feelings,
but I knew I wanted to do more then just visit" That day
kate discovered her calling in life, nursing, and spent the next
thirty years on an adventure that has been at once rewarding and
devastating, tumultuous and spiritual. Her memoir poignantly describes
the adventures of her nursing career, beginning with her trialsome
days as an LPN, where she lost her nursing license because of
a drug addiction, her recovery, and going back to school once
again to obtain her RN. The memoir meanders through the eighties
and ninties, where she writes about her experiences with insurance
companies and federal medicare systems, which have proven to be
somewhat flawed in the method in which they fund patients. Interspersed
within the memoir are hilarious anecdotes about nursing "mishaps"
magical accounts of patients having near death experiences, and
tales of strength, hope, and courage in a world of sickness and
death.
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