Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. May 19, 2008 · Berton Roueché, in a 1960 article on alcohol for The New Yorker, quoted a prominent fifteenth-century German physician, Hieronymus Brunschwig, on the range of physical ills curable by brandy ...

  2. Berton Roueché on a mysterious case of cyanosis—a type of poisoning so rare that, before 1948, only ten previous outbreaks of it had been recorded in medical literature.

    • Berton Roueché
  3. Berton Roueché is Contributor on The New Yorker. Read Berton Roueché's bio and get latest news stories and articles. Connect with users and join the conversation at The New Yorker.

    • Condé Nast
  4. An article he wrote for The New Yorker was made into the 1956 film Bigger Than Life, [3] [5] and many of the medical mysteries on the television show House were inspired by Roueché's writings. [6] [7]

    • Berton Roueché
    • 1958
  5. The most famous account of the Donora incident is “The Fog,” written two years later for The New Yorker by Berton Roueché, who remains one of the most esteemed writers of medical thrillers, a genre he practically reinvented during his fifty-year career.

  6. Apr 29, 1994 · Berton Roueche, a staff writer at The New Yorker for nearly 50 years who originated the Annals of Medicine series that chronicled the war against disease in elegant narratives of medical...

  7. People also ask

  8. Eleven Blue Men, and Other Narratives of Medical Detection is a collection of twelve true short stories written by Berton Roueché and published in 1953. Each story, including the titular story Eleven Blue Men, was originally published in the "Annals of Medicine" section of The New Yorker [1] between 1947 and 1953. [2]

  1. People also search for