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Let Me Count the Ways: A Memoir, by Tomas Q. Morin.

06/26/2024
Sadie Davenport
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Title: Let Me Count the Ways: A Memoir.

Author: Tomás Q. Morín. 

Publication info: University of Nebraska Press, 2022. eBook. Memoir, 198 pages. 

Location: Academic Search Complete(eBook available to read instantly.) 

Description: "2023 Vulgar Genius Nonfiction Award, 2022 Writer's League of Texas Nonfiction Book Award. Growing up in a small town in South Texas in the eighties and nineties, poverty, machismo, and drug addiction were everywhere for Tomás Q. Morín. He was around four or five years old when he first remembers his father cooking heroin, and he recalls many times he and his mother accompanied his father while he was on the hunt for more, Morín in the back seat keeping an eye out for unmarked cop cars, just as his father taught him. It was on one of these drives that, for the first time, he blinked in a way that evolution hadn’t intended.

Let Me Count the Ways is the memoir of a journey into obsessive-compulsive disorder, a mechanism to survive a childhood filled with pain, violence, and unpredictability. Morín’s compulsions were a way to hold onto his love for his family in uncertain times until OCD became a prison he struggled for decades to escape. Tender, unflinching, and even funny, this vivid portrait of South Texas life challenges our ideas about fatherhood, drug abuse, and mental illness." 

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Left: Dr. Wright in 1967. 

Middle: Dr. Wright using a microscope, unknown date. 

Right: Dr. Wright in 2011 with the American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO). 

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Watch: (Pharmacology video on "Methotrexate," the medication that improved chemotherapy)

 

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Louis Lewin also indirectly contributed to an ongoing debate about dental amalgam fillings: do they cause mercury poisoning, or not? One of his patients was chemistry professor Alfred Stock, who died from mercury poisoning (allegedly from occupational exposure, not from his fillings). While determining the cause of his poisoning, Lewin noted that his dental fillings were a possible source. Stock wrote against further use of amalgam, which refueled the ongoing debate on the topic in Germany. 

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