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The Heart Specialist
by Claire Holden Rothman

Published: 2011-06-07
Hardcover : 325 pages
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Recommended to book clubs by 2 of 4 members
Set in Quebec at the turn of the 19th to 20th century, The Heart Specialist is the epic story of Agnes White, a lonely orphaned girl fascinated by the "wrong" things--microscopes, dissections, and anatomy instead of more ladylike interests--who rises to the status of one of the world's ...
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Introduction

Set in Quebec at the turn of the 19th to 20th century, The Heart Specialist is the epic story of Agnes White, a lonely orphaned girl fascinated by the "wrong" things--microscopes, dissections, and anatomy instead of more ladylike interests--who rises to the status of one of the world's most celebrated pioneering women doctors. Not only does she break through patriarchal academic barriers; she masters the science of the human heart, becoming a scholar of international fame, all in a place and time inimical to intelligent women.

When Agnes is small, her father, a French-Canadian doctor living in Montreal, is charged with the murder of his handicapped sister. Although he is eventually acquitted, his reputation is ruined, and he flees, abandoning Agnes and her pregnant mother. Less than a year later, her mother dies of consumption, leaving Agnes and her baby sister Laure on their own. Agnes's sparse memories of her father have an abiding impact on her, and she is determined to find him, as well as to follow in his footsteps as a doctor, even though medical schools in Canada are closed to women at the time. She eventually gets her degree and finds a niche for herself as the curator of the McGill University pathology museum. But even as her professional star rises, her life is solitary and her happiness remains incomplete because of her missing father. One of the only clues in her quest to find him is a strange, misshapen heart that teaches her an invaluable lesson about love. Agnes ultimately must recognize that though she's a world-reknowned expert on the human heart, she still doesn't understand the her own.

Inspired by the career of Maude Abbott, one of Canada's first female physicians, The Heart Specialist is a novel about the mysterious, painful journey into selfhood.

Editorial Review

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Excerpt

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Discussion Questions

From the publisher:

1. One of the central images of the novel is a misshapen, three‐chambered human heart in a
laboratory bottle. Human hearts normally have four chambers – two atria and two ventricles –
but the Howlett Heart, as it is called in the book, has only one ventricle, which confuses Agnes
White when she discovers it in the McGill museum of pathology. At first she thinks it is reptilian
or perhaps amphibian, but eventually she realizes it's human, albeit gravely defective. She
publishes an article about it in a scholarly journal, a first step in what will become her celebrated
career in heart medicine. The deformed heart is also the first of a series of clues leading to her
missing father, and it figures in her discovery of love at the novel’s end. What does the Howlett
Heart evoke for you? What are its functions in the novel?
2. The Heart Specialist tells the story of a young woman trying to enter medicine at a time when
this was nearly impossible. Other characters in the novel are marginalized as well. Agnes’s lab
assistant Jakob Hertzlich is marginalized because of his religion. Her colleague Dugald Rivers is
marginalized due to sexual orientation. These characters are all hurt by a society with overly
rigid definitions of social roles. Which characters in the novel are marginal? Which are
mainstream? What impact does this have on their fates?
3. Vision is a motif in this novel. Agnes White is myopic. George Skerry is constantly removing her
spectacles and rubbing the lenses clean. Honoré Bourret is half‐blind when Agnes finally meets
him at the novel`s end, and shortly after that meeting, Agnes declares, ``I just opened my eyes
for the first time in fifty years. It certainly took me long enough. I had built my life on a dream.``
Discuss vision and its symbolic importance in this book.
4. In section VI of the novel, entitled War, Agnes White laments that she has been forced, due to
her sex, to stay in Montreal, while her male colleagues head off to France to serve in the First
World War. She is deeply jealous of them. After reading letters from Dugald Rivers, however,
her view shifts. ``From that day until I died,`` she declares, ``I would offer up prayers of thanks
for the good fortune of having been born a woman.`` Agnes White has conflicting feelings about
womanhood. Would you characterize her as a feminist?
5. Agnes White pursues a career in medicine in large part as an attempt to enter the world of her
missing father. The father quest is an archetypal story form, found in ancient myth and legend.
In the Greek myths, for instance, Theseus goes in search of his missing father, Aegeus, and in the
process proves himself a hero. Likewise, young Telemachus searches for his missing father
Odysseus, and proves his own courage and worth. Discuss the ways in which The Heart Specialist
is a father quest, with a twist.
6. Love is hard to achieve in this novel filled with hearts. Is there a successful love relationship
here?
7. The Heart Specialist was inspired by one of Canada`s first female physicians, Doctor Maude
Abbott. Does this fact change your approach to the novel? How?
8. The act of story‐telling is important in The Heart Specialist. Twice, Agnes White recounts the
story of her life: the first time to William Howlett in Baltimore, and the second to George Skerry
by the river in Saint Andrew`s East, right at the novel`s end. Why are these two scenes
important in the novel?
9. Compare the two sisters, Laure and Agnes. One picked a more traditional female life, the other
charted new waters. What were their fates? Now add George Skerry into the mix. What kinds of
options for happiness and fulfillment did women have in the society depicted in this novel?
10. This novel opens with death, and death seems to follow Agnes White wherever she goes. In
part, this is because of her profession. But could the death be metaphoric as well as literal?
Must Agnes White die in this novel, to be figuratively reborn?

Notes From the Author to the Bookclub

Note from author Claire Holden Rothman:

The central idea of The Heart Specialist isn’t medicine or history or biography. I am interested in all of these subjects and used them to enrich my novel, but they do not drive the book. Rather, my aim in writing The Heart Specialist was to explore the challenges and triumphs a young woman encounters as she seeks a sense of who she is.

The novel’s main character, Agnes White, is brave and resourceful – useful traits in a world that does little to help her. More importantly, she wants something intensely. That something is entry into a medical faculty, but I realized as I wrote the book that the object of Agnes’s wanting is less important than the wanting itself. My interest is desire, and the way it pushes us along the bumpy road of self-discovery.

The image of a young woman sitting in a pathology museum in the opening years of the 20th century, surrounded by jars containing deformed hearts, sparked my imagination. I’m no doctor, but like Agnes White, I’ve devoted my life to trying to understand the human heart.

I hope this novel transports readers to a forgotten place and time. Most of all, though, I hope it inspires them to listen to their hearts.

Claire Holden Rothman

Book Club Recommendations

Member Reviews

Overall rating:
 
 
  "The Heart Specialist"by Suzi F. (see profile) 08/20/11

 
  "Heart Specialist"by Deborah A. (see profile) 07/28/11

As a group we found it slow and non-interesting. We felt there were parts missing that could have brought the story to life better.

 
  "The Heart Specialist"by Pat F. (see profile) 07/27/11

 
  "The Heart Specialist"by Deborah K. (see profile) 07/01/11

I loved this piece of historical fiction. The main character, Dr. Agnes White, overcame sexual bias and personal challenges, becoming a renowned physician. Her struggles to achieve her dreams in a time... (read more)

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