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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
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: