Analysing the books in the series, we estimate that the reading level of White Hot Light: Twenty-Five Years in Emergency Medicine is 5th and 6th grade.
Readability Test | Reading Level |
---|---|
Flesch Kincaid Scale | Grade 5 |
SMOG Index | Grade 7 |
Coleman Liau Index | Grade 6 |
Dale Chall Readability Score | Grade 5 |
The estimated word count of White Hot Light: Twenty-Five Years in Emergency Medicine is 56,265 words.
A person reading at the average speed of 250 words/min, will finish the book in 3 hrs 46 mins. At a slower speed of 150 words/min, they will finish it in 6 hrs 16 mins. At a faster speed of 450 words/min, they will finish it in 2 hrs 6 mins.
White Hot Light: Twenty-Five Years in Emergency Medicine - 56,265 words | ||
---|---|---|
Reading Speed | Time to Read | |
Slow | 150 words/min | 6 hrs 16 mins |
Average | 250 words/min | 3 hrs 46 mins |
Fast | 450 words/min | 2 hrs 6 mins |
for White Hot Light: Twenty-Five Years in Emergency Medicine
Another “pitch-perfect book of short essays” (New York Times Book Review) from the acclaimed author of Blood of Strangers, this one exploring the contemporary practice of medicine from the perspective of a doctor with 25 years of experience in the ER.In the late 1990s, a young physician in Albuquerque, New Mexico, published a stunning memoir of his experiences in the highly charged world of the ER. Presented in a series of powerful, poetic vignettes, The Blood of Strangers became an instant classic.Now, over two decades later, Dr. Frank Huyler delivers another dispatch from the trenches—this time from the perspective of middle age. In portraits visceral, haunting, sometimes surreal, Huyler reveals the gritty reality of medicine practiced on the razor’s edge between life and death.From the doomed, like the Iraq vet with a brain full of shrapnel, to the self-destructive, like the young woman who inserts a sewing needle into her heart, to the transcendent, like the homeless Navajo artist whose sketches charm the nurses, Huyler assembles a profound mosaic of human suffering and grace, complemented by episodes from his personal life: the hail that fell the night his wife gave birth, his drive through a snowstorm to see his father in a Colorado ER, the beautiful wedding of his childhood friend with terminal cancer. Melding hard-earned wisdom with a poet’s crystalline vision, Huyler evokes the awesome burden of responsibility, the exhaustion, the relief of a costume disco nurse party, and those rare occasions when the confluence of luck and science yield, in the author’s words, “moments of breathtaking greatness.” White Hot Light offers an unforgettable portrait of a field that illuminates society at its most vulnerable, and its most elemental.