Wrongful Death A Memoir

Wrongful Death: A Memoir by Sandra M. Gilbert, published by W.W. Norton in 1997, is a poignant exploration of the aftermath of a medical tragedy. In this first paperback edition, Gilbert recounts the shocking experience of losing her husband, Elliot Gilbert, a professor of English, just hours after a routine prostate surgery. The narrative delves into the family’s struggle to understand the circumstances surrounding his death, which remains shrouded in mystery, and highlights the emotional turmoil they faced in the wake of such a loss.
In this memoir, readers will find a candid examination of grief and the quest for answers in the face of a medical disaster that is often overlooked in discussions about malpractice. Gilbert’s account not only reflects on her personal journey but also raises critical questions about the legal and medical systems that govern healthcare. As she navigates the complexities of wrongful death and the implications for both the deceased and their survivors, the book sheds light on the vulnerabilities inherent in the healthcare establishment. With 364 pages, this edition offers an in-depth look at the intersection of personal loss and broader societal issues related to medical practices.
Official synopsis Publisher
On February 10, 1991, Elliot Gilbert, a sixty-year-old professor of English, checked into a major medical center for routine prostate surgery. Twenty-four hours later, he was pronounced dead in the recovery room. To this day, no one from the hospital has told his family how or why he died. In Wrongful Death his widow has produced a searingly frank account of one family’s experience with a kind of medical disaster that occurs surprisingly often but is all-too-rarely discussed in a political arena dominated by concerns about the escalating costs of malpractice insurance. As her story unfolds, Sandra Gilbert describes the numbing shock into which she and her children were plunged by her husband’s inexplicable death as well as the stages of grief they endured as they struggled to come to terms with their loss. But her major focus is on the process of discovery through which, with the help of friends and lawyers, they began to learn something about what had happened to Elliot. What are the implications of such a medical tragedy for the deceased and for his survivors? How does it feel to confront the possibility that a loved one has suffered what the law calls a “wrongful death”? As she examines the bewildering complexity of the legal, social, and medical questions surrounding “adverse events” like the one that killed her husband, Gilbert shows how vulnerable we all are to the power of the health-care establishment.
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