Second Suns: Two Doctors and Their Amazing Quest to Restore Sight and Save Lives

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Random House Publishing Group, Jun 18, 2013 - Biography & Autobiography - 432 pages
From the co-author of Three Cups of Tea comes the inspiring story of two very different doctors—one from the United States, the other from Nepal—united in a common mission: to rid the world of preventable blindness.
 
In this transporting book, David Oliver Relin shines a light on the work of Geoffrey Tabin and Sanduk Ruit, gifted ophthalmologists who have dedicated their lives to restoring sight to some of the world’s most isolated, impoverished people through the Himalayan Cataract Project, an organization they founded in 1995. Tabin was the high-achieving bad boy of Harvard Medical School, an accomplished mountain climber and adrenaline junkie as brilliant as he was unconventional. Ruit grew up in a remote Nepalese village, where he became intimately acquainted with the human costs of inadequate access to health care. Together they found their life’s calling: tending to the afflicted people of the Himalayas, a vast mountainous region with an alarmingly high incidence of cataract blindness.
 
Second Suns takes us from improvised plywood operating tables in villages without electricity or plumbing to state-of-the-art surgical centers at major American universities where these two driven men are restoring sight—and hope—to patients from around the world. With their revolutionary, inexpensive style of surgery, Tabin and Ruit have been able to cure tens of thousands—all for about twenty dollars per operation. David Oliver Relin brings the doctors’ work to vivid life through poignant portraits of patients helped by the surgery, from old men who cannot walk treacherous mountain trails unaided to cataract-stricken children who have not seen their mothers’ faces for years. With the dexterity of a master storyteller, Relin shows the profound emotional and practical impact that these operations have had on patients’ lives.
 
Second Suns is the moving, unforgettable story of how two men with a shared dream are changing the world, one pair of eyes at a time.

Praise for Second Suns
 
“As miracles go, it’s hard to beat making the blind see. Yet that’s exactly what the eye surgeon Dr. Geoffrey Tabin can do. He services poor people in the developing world who have developed cataracts—a clouding of the lens of the eye that is the world’s leading cause of blindness. . . . Second Suns is a hopeful work, a profile of two doctors who have dedicated their lives to bringing light to those in darkness.”Time
 
“A compelling and inspiring book . . . Second Suns portrays heroic health care delivered under harrowing conditions: Ruit and his teams carry their equipment on multi-day treks up steep mountain trails, sometimes hiking at night with flashlights or head lamps, to reach settlements where they typically spend several days operating on hundreds of villagers in makeshift surgical theaters.”The Washington Post
 
Second Suns should be required reading for anybody with an interest in humanitarian philanthropy—or, for that matter, a desire to feel a little better about the world.”Outside
 
“A detailed, heartfelt account of the work of [two] dedicated pioneers.”Kirkus Reviews


From the Hardcover edition.
 

Contents

See
3
Vound Construction CHAPTER 3 Here You
26
Burn the Day ll IAPIER 5 Down from the Moon CHAPTER 6 Stones on Your Chest
61
Daylight in the Dark
75
A Bit of Sport CHAPTER 9 The Problem of Her Eyes
103
The Eighth Summit
118
If You Can Dream CHAPTER 12 Stream of Sesame Seeds
152
The Most Eyes on Earth
167
Burn the Old House Down
256
Ravishing Beautiful Flowers
259
Clear Vision for Life
277
CHAPIER 23 Eye Contact
307
The Road Is Coming
326
This Is Rwanda
346
Hands Eyes Heart
372
The W inter Trail
385

Three Shirts 1 Day CHAPTER 15 The Vave Is Water CHAPTER 16 Rock Meets Bone
203
Sir Is Villing CHAPTER 18 Load Shedding
228
Author Note
409
Copyright

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About the author (2013)

David Oliver Relin is the co-author of the #1 New York Times bestseller Three Cups of Tea, which has been translated into more than two dozen languages. He has received numerous awards for his work, including the Kiriyama Prize and a James A. Michener Fellowship. He died in November 2012.

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