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Residing recently in the Sheila Sherlock room in the refurbished accommodations at the William Harvey house at the College of Physicians in London, I was reminded that it was she who first told me (at one of my unsuccessful Consultant interviews) that "Gastroenterologists help people to get square meals through round holes". I have been at that task ever since, often with an endoscope in hand, as recounted in a recent memoir called The Tunnel at the End of the Light (www.peterbcotton.com).
I approached Peter Down's majestic history of the British contributions to 'luminal gastroenterology' with some trepidation. It is 780 pages long, with almost 1500 references, and looked like seriously heavy going. It is indeed heavy, but it took only a few pages for me to realise that Peter has married serious scholarship with a conversational style that makes easy, indeed enjoyable, reading.
Each of the 76 chapters in the seven sections (oesophagus, stomach and duodenum, small intestine, coeliac disease, IBD, functional bowel disorders and GI endoscopy) tells a compelling story of challenges, stumbles and triumphs, coming right up to the present day.
He starts at the top of the tunnel, and alphabet, with Achalasia, weaving a fascinating tale of attempts to recognise, understand and...