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'I try to represent medicine accurately'

The Guardian Weekly

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June 27, 2025

Rachel Clarke talks about the amazing families involved in her Women's prize-winning book and how being a doctor frames the way she writes

- By Alex Clark

'I try to represent medicine accurately'

To read Rachel Clarke’s The Story of a Heart, which has won this year’s Women’s prize for nonfiction, is to experience an onslaught of often competing emotions. There is awed disbelief at the sheer skill and dedication of the medical teams who transplanted the heart of nine-year-old Keira, who had been killed in a head-on traffic collision, into the body of Max, a little boy facing almost certain death from rapidly deteriorating dilated cardiomyopathy. There is vast admiration for the compassion of the teams who cared for both children and their families, and wonder at the cascade of medical advances, each representing determination, rigorous work, and careful navigation of newly emerging ethical territory. And most flooring of all is the immense courage of two families, one devastated by the sudden loss of a precious child, the other faced with a diagnosis that threatened to tear their lives apart.

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