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Overview""Live with no excuses and travel with no regrets."" --Oscar Wilde Improbable Journeys is the remarkable story of a life lived in keeping with Wilde's precept--the life of physician and teacher Bernard Binns. As Binns' friend Tony Brown said after reading this memoir: ""You have led a fantastically interesting life, with a geographical journey like no other--from the Falklands and Kerala, to Srinagar and Kashgar, Suez and Gibraltar, Worksop, London and Oxford, Nigeria and Uganda, Winnipeg and the Arctic, San Francisco and Vancouver Island, and finally to your beloved Whakatane in New Zealand. You present your story as an education in itself. So many of your descriptions, perhaps in particular of ways of life in Canada, are so interesting to read, always with the knowledge that this is a real story."" Born in the Falkland Islands during his father's posting there with the Colonial Service, Binns would move with his family on subsequent postings first to India and then to Chinese Turkestan, the latter reached only after an arduous trek through the Himalayas. After the Second World War, he returned to Britain, enrolling in medical school at the University of London after completing high school. Later, Binns specialized in obstetrics and gynaecology at Oxford. Upon completing his training he worked in Uganda, just as Idi Amin was rising to power. Following a stint back in England he moved to Winnipeg with his wife Elaine (also a physician) and children, where he practiced obstetrics and gynaecology. Displeased with changes in medical administration, he returned to university in San Francisco, qualifying in infectious diseases just as the AIDS epidemic hit. His later career included a decade teaching at the University of Manitoba and trips to the Canadian Arctic, where he learned firsthand of the medical and social challenges facing the Inuit. Improbable Journeys--part travelogue, part medical memoir--paints a remarkable portrait of people and places as well as answering the timeless question of what makes for a successful healer. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Bernard A O Binns , Ron SmithPublisher: Rock's Mills Press Imprint: Rock's Mills Press Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.70cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.694kg ISBN: 9781772441932ISBN 10: 1772441937 Pages: 478 Publication Date: 11 May 2020 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In stock We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsThis fascinating story records the adventurous life of Dr Bernard Binns (born 1934), a surgeon specialising in Obstetrics and Gynaecology and later in infectious diseases. Improbable Journeys, however, is not all about medical matters. It describes adventures that should appeal to anyone interested in travel, especially to places infrequently visited; also, to those interested in the way of life in such countries, or to those who just enjoy reading about the intrepid---a word which also applies to Dr Binns' wife, Elaine, herself a medical doctor. The literary style of Improbable Journeys is attractive, and the story is told in a compelling manner by the adventurer and his co-author, Ron Smith. Bernard Binns' extraordinary memory for details of past events makes each chapter uniquely captivating. The dual authorship with Smith has helped greatly when uncovering these memories, and in deciding what to include to create the book's magic. ---John Kenwright, formerly Nuffield Professor of Orthopaedic Surgery at Oxford University, in The Ormsby Review Dr. Bernard Binns' memoir, co-written with Ron Smith, is partly a travelogue and mostly a commentary on the teaching and practice of medicine.... The book takes the reader on a journey through parts of the world, many of which Binns visited in his childhood, that few of us will ever have the opportunity to visit... Binns' acute visual, auditory, and olfactory memories provide an abundance of detail presented in Ron Smith's understated and straightforward writing style that keeps the narrative flowing. ---May Wong, The Ormsby Review ""This fascinating story records the adventurous life of Dr Bernard Binns (born 1934), a surgeon specialising in Obstetrics and Gynaecology and later in infectious diseases. Improbable Journeys, however, is not all about medical matters. It describes adventures that should appeal to anyone interested in travel, especially to places infrequently visited; also, to those interested in the way of life in such countries, or to those who just enjoy reading about the intrepid---a word which also applies to Dr Binns' wife, Elaine, herself a medical doctor. The literary style of Improbable Journeys is attractive, and the story is told in a compelling manner by the adventurer and his co-author, Ron Smith. Bernard Binns' extraordinary memory for details of past events makes each chapter uniquely captivating. The dual authorship with Smith has helped greatly when uncovering these memories, and in deciding what to include to create the book's magic."" ---John Kenwright, formerly Nuffield Professor of Orthopaedic Surgery at Oxford University, in The Ormsby Review ""Dr. Bernard Binns' memoir, co-written with Ron Smith, is partly a travelogue and mostly a commentary on the teaching and practice of medicine.... The book takes the reader on a journey through parts of the world, many of which Binns visited in his childhood, that few of us will ever have the opportunity to visit... Binns' acute visual, auditory, and olfactory memories provide an abundance of detail presented in Ron Smith's understated and straightforward writing style that keeps the narrative flowing."" ---May Wong, The Ormsby Review """This fascinating story records the adventurous life of Dr Bernard Binns (born 1934), a surgeon specialising in Obstetrics and Gynaecology and later in infectious diseases. Improbable Journeys, however, is not all about medical matters. It describes adventures that should appeal to anyone interested in travel, especially to places infrequently visited; also, to those interested in the way of life in such countries, or to those who just enjoy reading about the intrepid---a word which also applies to Dr Binns' wife, Elaine, herself a medical doctor. The literary style of Improbable Journeys is attractive, and the story is told in a compelling manner by the adventurer and his co-author, Ron Smith. Bernard Binns' extraordinary memory for details of past events makes each chapter uniquely captivating. The dual authorship with Smith has helped greatly when uncovering these memories, and in deciding what to include to create the book's magic."" ---John Kenwright, formerly Nuffield Professor of Orthopaedic Surgery at Oxford University, in The Ormsby Review ""Dr. Bernard Binns' memoir, co-written with Ron Smith, is partly a travelogue and mostly a commentary on the teaching and practice of medicine.... The book takes the reader on a journey through parts of the world, many of which Binns visited in his childhood, that few of us will ever have the opportunity to visit... Binns' acute visual, auditory, and olfactory memories provide an abundance of detail presented in Ron Smith's understated and straightforward writing style that keeps the narrative flowing."" ---May Wong, The Ormsby Review" Author InformationAfter a disruptive childhood and early schooling in India and Chinese Turkestan, Dr. Binns graduated from Guy's Hospital Medical School in London, specializing in Obstetrics and Gynaecology, before practicing in the UK, Uganda, Canada and New Zealand. Following a long and distinguished career, he added infectious diseases to his résumé and worked as an assistant professor in the Medical School at the University of Manitoba, Canada. He now lives with his wife, also a physician, in Nanoose Bay, B.C. and Whakatane, New Zealand. Ron Smith is the author and editor of several books. His most recent book, The Defiant Mind: Living Inside a Stroke, was long-listed for the George Ryga Prize and won the Independent Publishers IPPY gold medal for memoir. For close to forty years he taught at universities in Canada, Italy, the United States and the UK. In 2002 he received an honorary doctorate from the University of British Columbia and in 2005 he was the inaugural Fulbright Chair in Creative Writing at Arizona State University. In 2011 he was awarded the Gray Campbell Award for distinguished service to the British Columbia publishing industry. He now lives with his wife, Patricia Jean Smith, also a writer, in Nanoose Bay, B.C. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |