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Does Acupuncture Work As Anesthesia For Surgery?

The scary facts an award-winning reporter learned from a doctor who escaped from North Korea

Janice Harayda
2 min readAug 6, 2022

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Acupuncture needles / Credit: AANMC

Books about dictatorship are booming. After the election of Donald Trump, Hannah Arendt’s The Origins of Totalitarian began selling at 16 times the usual rate, and a torrent of books about tyrants has followed.

The standouts include Those Who Forget: My Family’s Story in Nazi Europe (Scribner, 2020). A European Book Prize winner, this nonfiction account melds history and memoir as the journalist Géraldine Schwarz views contemporary far-right movements through the lens of her German grandfather’s Nazi Party membership.

A decade earlier came the remarkable Nothing to Envy: Ordinary Lives in North Korea (Spiegel & Grau, 2010). In a National Book Award finalist, the journalist Barbara Demick tells the true stories of residents of North Korea who escaped by forging passports, bribing border guards, or using other cloak-and-dagger techniques.

Demick includes an especially memorable portrait of a doctor she calls Kim Ji-eun, who worked in a small hospital during the crippling famine in the 1990s. She interviewed Kim about North Korean medicine, including the use of acupuncture for anesthesia, and writes in Nothing to Envy:

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Janice Harayda
Janice Harayda

Written by Janice Harayda

Critic, novelist, award-winning journalist. Former book editor of the Plain Dealer and book columnist for Glamour. Words in NYT, WSJ, and other major media.

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