Adventures of Working Men. From the Notebook of a Working Surgeon by Fenn

(7 User reviews)   914
By Angela Green Posted on Jan 17, 2026
In Category - Mountaineering
Fenn, George Manville, 1831-1909 Fenn, George Manville, 1831-1909
English
Hey, have you ever wondered what it was really like to be a doctor in the 19th century? Not the fancy London surgeons, but the ones out in the country, dealing with everything on their own? I just finished 'Adventures of Working Men' and it’s a wild ride. It’s basically the diary of a country surgeon, but it reads like a collection of short, urgent mysteries. Each chapter is a new patient, a new crisis. A farmer with a strange wound, a child with a fever no one can explain, an accident at the mill. The main conflict isn't against one villain; it's this young doctor fighting against ignorance, superstition, lack of equipment, and the clock, with someone's life on the line every single time. It’s tense, surprisingly funny in places, and gives you a raw, boots-on-the-ground look at a world we only see in period dramas. If you like medical dramas or historical stories about ordinary people, you need to check this out.
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Let's pull back the curtain on Victorian medicine, but forget the polished hallways of a city hospital. 'Adventures of Working Men' throws us into the muddy boots of a young country surgeon, fresh from his training and utterly alone. His 'notebook' is our window into a world of constant, high-stakes problem-solving.

The Story

The book doesn't have a single plot. Instead, it's a series of vivid episodes from the surgeon's life. One day he's racing his horse to a remote farmhouse to set a compound fracture by candlelight. The next, he's trying to diagnose a mysterious illness in a village where everyone believes in 'bad air' or curses more than germs. He battles not just disease and injury, but also the deep-seated fears and old wives' tales of his patients. There's no X-ray machine, no ambulance, and often no one to help him. Every case is a puzzle he has to solve with his wits, his limited tools, and a whole lot of courage.

Why You Should Read It

What grabbed me was the sheer humanity of it. This surgeon isn't a flawless hero. He gets frustrated, he makes mistakes, and he's often scared. But his dedication is absolute. George Manville Fenn, who likely drew from real-life accounts, makes you feel the weight of that responsibility. You're right there with him, feeling the panic when a wound turns septic, or the triumph when a simple, clever solution saves a life. It's also a fascinating look at how much medicine has changed. You'll gain a huge appreciation for modern antibiotics and sterile procedures after seeing what they had to work with!

Final Verdict

This is a perfect pick for anyone who loves historical nonfiction that reads like an adventure story. If you're a fan of shows about medical pioneers, or if you enjoy first-person accounts of life in the past, you'll be hooked. It's not a dry history lesson; it's a collection of gripping, sometimes gritty, always human stories from the front lines of a forgotten world. Just be prepared—you might never look at a minor cut the same way again.

John Lewis
1 year ago

Simply put, the storytelling feels authentic and emotionally grounded. Definitely a 5-star read.

Jackson Scott
1 year ago

I have to admit, it challenges the reader's perspective in an intellectual way. Thanks for sharing this review.

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4 out of 5 (7 User reviews )

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