Overview
A silver lining could be that his failures would cut away at the professional distance between Braydon and his patients, giving him greater capacity for empathy. Maybe. But one thing's for certain. He will discover that as a man who earns a living by conveying wisdom, he is not above the same type of frailties faced by anyone seeking his services, no matter how unique or bizarre their circumstances might initially appear.
The novel doesn't end on this simple, existential note. Instead, it snakes through numerous sub-plots that all come together in a denouement that defines the doctor's true self. Whatever insight he might have gained in the process is a gift that comes not from textbooks or mentors, but from the very individuals who have humbled themselves before him. He will need to discover that his patients are in some ways healthier for having taken the risk of confiding and working on their insecurities, a risk that Braydon finds utterly challenging.
Entitled Sigmund Fraud, Licensed Impostor, this down-to-earth novel paints a human face on both patients and the caregivers that minister to them. They are all similar, all human, no matter what their professions, accomplishments, or boastings might suggest. The underlying theme is that there is more to each person than the fabricated face presented in everyday life. George Eliot suggested that one can't judge a book by its cover. And one of the characters in James Jones' The Thin Red Line said, " … everybody lived by a selected fiction. Nobody was really what he pretended to be." Leonards' novel looks beyond those fictions by providing a window into the vulnerabilities and defense mechanisms shared by doctor and patient alike.
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