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A tiny girl, Homa, is at the heart of this graceful novel by Frank Huyler, a US emergency doctor. We learn very little about her world, the mountains of an impoverished Islamic country. We see only for an instant her family, her home, and the life set out for her. But we witness in great detail the moment when Charles Anderson, a US cardiologist volunteering in her land, amputates her foot with only simple instruments in a makeshift clinic.
Right of Thirst , Huyler's third book, is based on a real life event. As a medical student in the early 1990s Huyler trekked through the mountains of northern Pakistan. On his way down from the mountains a group of villagers asked Huyler to see a young girl with a crushed foot. Like Homa, she needed an amputation, which Huyler could not provide. The young medical student offered to transport the girl to the city, but the offer was refused. The girl was carried on her...




