A PATHOLOGIST REMEMBERS
MEMORIES OF CHILDHOOD AND LATER LIFE
by
Book Details
About the Book
In parts a whimsical and entertaining story, in others an informative guide by a knowledgeable and much-respected professional in his field, this highly readable portrayal of Alan Mills’ life and adventures is told in an appealing tone, rooted in the history of the times and places where he has practised his craft. A son of Southern Africa, the author has enjoyed a privileged life of good fortune. He has worked in Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe), England, South Africa, Australia and Ireland. Pathology has been his life. It was how he earned a living, and in retirement has become his hobby. In his autobiography he shares the highs and lows of his own long and interesting career in pathology, in addition to a well-researched guide to medical history. A framework of great medical advances is linked to Nobel Laureates, with comments on their lives. The role of the pathologist in medical research is stressed. The author has traced the evolution of human beings, from earliest life forms through our ancestral ‘African Eve’ in East Africa to the present day. This development is coupled with genetic information relating to such things as oncogenes and how they relate to cancer, and other diseases. This enlightening book has an easy, chatty style, and is not without humour and a little poetry.
About the Author
Alan Mills grew up in Bulawayo, Southern Rhodesia enjoying the privileged colonial lifestyle of the times. After schooling in Southern Rhodesia and Grahamstown, South Africa, he studied medicine in Dublin. On returning to Bulawayo as a doctor, after a few years of general clinical work, he decided to specialize in pathology. Pathology training was completed in London. He became a consultant pathologist in Bulawayo for 19 years, followed by 6 years in Cape Town, with the last 25 years spent practice in Australia. Thus he has worked as a pathologist for 50 years in 5 countries, Rhodesia, England, Zimbabwe, South Africa and Ireland, where he has retired with his wife, Ena.