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39 pages 1 hour read

Michele Harper

The Beauty in Breaking

Nonfiction | Autobiography / Memoir | Adult | Published in 2020

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IntroductionChapter Summaries & Analyses

Introduction Summary

Harper quotes Hazrat Inayat Khan: “God breaks the heart again and again and again until it stays open” (xi). She then opens with the image of a patient’s head in her hands, blood running down from his scalp into her gloves. She paints a clear, tangible picture of a typically chaotic day in the emergency room, where even in the chaos she finds the determination to do all she can to improve outcomes and save lives. She articulates her identity as not only a doctor but a survivor of domestic violence, a Black woman in a supposedly post-racial country, and a woman whose marriage ended just as her medical career was launching. She reveals that she wrote the book during a season of “starting over” (xii) and contextualizes the book by framing it in her experience and credibility as someone who has been broken and rebuilt. Harper compares this to the Japanese practice of Kintsukuroi, in which artisans repair broken pottery by filling in the cracks with precious metals to highlight the beauty of the breaks. She adds that she hopes to give readers an insider’s glimpse into the demanding work of emergency medicine and show them its “center” (xii).

Introduction Analysis

The opening quotation about the heart repeatedly breaking aptly summarizes Harper’s premise. In addition, it reflects the physical and emotional relentlessness of working in emergency medicine. After describing her work as an emergency physician, she immediately makes herself more broadly relatable by articulating her identity as a multifaceted human who has struggled as much as anyone, navigating crises through times of uncertainty, even as she began writing the book. Harper then grounds her story in symbolism by evoking the image of Kintsukuroi—a practice that celebrates broken pottery as more beautiful because of its brokenness. Through the Kintsukuroi image, she sets up the rest of the book as a narrative of a life repaired—and connects her work as a doctor to the intimate experiences of her life outside the hospital. 

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