Pulse Of The Body : A Novel of Medicine, Humanity, and the Edge of Life
Overview
The novel Pulse of the Body
The story follows Thomas Shimur, a former biology teacher with terminal kidney failure, as he enters a nephrology ward and is forced to confront the loss of control over his own body and life. What begins as denial and resentment slowly becomes a journey through fear, grief, acceptance, and a redefinition of what it means to "survive."
Two key physicians orbit Thomas's story:
Dr. Lea Mountchain, a nephrologist marked by the unresolved trauma of a young patient's death, is deeply compassionate but burdened by guilt. Caring for Thomas forces her to face her own past, balance professional detachment with empathy, and rediscover medicine as an art of accompanying patients rather than merely fixing organs. Through him, she finds a kind of personal redemption.
Prof. Victor Kraal, a visionary transplant and renal surgeon, champions a high-risk experimental procedure involving bioengineered kidney tissue and hybrid implants. Brilliant but ethically troubled, he wrestles with the tension between innovation and hubris, asking whether extending life at all costs truly serves the patient's dignity. Thomas's case becomes a mirror for his own doubts about progress, legacy, and the limits of medicine.
The novel moves between:
- The ward and the dialysis room, where machines sustain life but also highlight dependence and loss of autonomy. We see the emotional labor of nurses and doctors, the camaraderie and quiet suffering of other patients, and the ward as a small community of shared vulnerability, humor, and resilience.
- Thomas's inner turmoil, including vivid nightmares, memories of teaching, estranged family relationships, and a deep fear not only of death but of losing his identity. He must choose between continuing exhausting dialysis, accepting Kraal's experimental operation, or eventually stopping treatment.
- Family and staff perspectives, especially difficult conversations with his sister and mother about risk, quality of life, and what "fighting" really means; and staff conflicts about pushing experimental treatments vs. protecting patients from harm.
Thomas ultimately undergoes radical surgery, survives, and enters a painful but meaningful recovery. The operation does not cure him; it grants limited, fragile time. During this period, he slowly regains strength, rebuilds some family ties, and reaches a more peaceful acceptance of his mortality. His relationship with Lea deepens into a space where both can speak honestly about fear, control, and letting go.
By the end:
- Thomas's life and eventual death leave a strong imprint on the ward.
- Lea emerges changed - more open, emotionally honest, and anchored in a model of care that integrates science with narrative and empathy.
- Kraal redefines his notion of success, shifting from pure technical triumph to a broader ethic that centers the patient's story, dignity, and informed choice.
The novel as a whole uses the world of nephrology - dialysis machines, surgical theaters, ICU rooms, waiting areas - as a microcosm of human existence, where technology and biology continuously intersect with love, guilt, hope, and grief. "Pulse of the body" becomes more than a heartbeat: it is the enduring pulse of human spirit and connection, even at the edge of life.
This item is Non-Returnable
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Details
- ISBN-13: 9798275086690
- ISBN-10: 9798275086690
- Publisher: Independently Published
- Publish Date: November 2025
- Dimensions: 9 x 6 x 0.45 inches
- Shipping Weight: 0.64 pounds
- Page Count: 214
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