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Medical Figures, Religious Biography
Albert Schweitzer by Gire, Ken — book cover

Albert Schweitzer

by Gire, Ken
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Overview

A learned, respected, accomplished man leaves a life of worldly success to serve Christ among "the least of these."

Albert Schweitzer was a Renaissance man who basked in the utmost respect of the world's intelligentsia. Schweitzer had doctorates in philosophy, theology, and medicine. He was a well-respected author, a concert organist, and a world authority on Bach. He won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1952.

But he left a life of acclaim to pursue the God-given call to treat all life as sacred, especially in those places on the fringe-in Africa. In what is now Gabon, indigenous people would see him daily with his stethoscope on a distended belly and hear him nighly performing classical music on his piano.

In a time when many people feel small and inconsequential, Schweitzer's life is a testimony to the power of one person's amazing sacrifice, purpose, and the commitment to treat all of God's creations as sacred.

About the Author, Gire, Ken

Ken Gire is the author of more than a dozen books. He has won two Gold Medallion awards. His four-book Moments with the Savior series has sold more than 250,000 copies. A full-time writer and speaker, Ken has been involved in the ministries of Young Life, Insight for Living, and Reflective Living. He presently lives in Baltimore, Maryland.

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Editorials

Publishers Weekly

Renaissance man Albert Schweitzer’s long and storied life (1876–1965) as a missionary, doctor, philosopher, and organist is distilled into a concise parable, centered around his multiple sojourns in West Africa, where he established a hospital. A Christian author and speaker, Gire (At Peace in the Storm) delivers Schweitzer’s life as a homily, presenting his subject’s “philosophy of reverence for life” in potent, accessible imagery: treating patients, personally laboring in hospital construction, nurturing injured animals. Clear prose and spiritual inspiration generally supersede details and absolute fact. Conversations are “surmised and assumed,” and “a couple of characters” are admitted to be inventions (though it isn’t clear which ones). Through such literary liberties, Schweitzer is given an expository voice, using casual conversations to provide backstory to his rich life. Though his depiction of the doctor is a generally objective narrative, Gire’s faith occasionally emerges in religious phrasing, which may alienate non-Christians. The birth of Schweitzer’s daughter becomes the “promise of God,” and a financial boon at his mission hospital makes it a “great day for the kingdom of God.” This approach condenses the 90-year life of a noble humanitarian into a brief motivational sermon, an uncomplicated summation of Schweitzer’s life suitable for an interested Christian fellowship. Agent: Greg Johnson, WordServe Literary (Apr. 16)

Library Journal

Celebrating the 100th anniversary of Albert Schweitzer's emigration to Gabon (formerly part of French Equatorial Africa), to found a hospital, Gire ("Moments with the Savior" series) digs into Schweitzer's motivation to give up conventional medical practice and live a life of service in the Gabon rain forest well before medical missions were usual. Gire illuminates the fascinating life of this 1952 Nobel Prize recipient, albeit with the addition of a couple of fictional characters and imagined dialog. Beginning with his subject's birth in Günsbach, Alsace, the son of a pastor, Gire artfully describes Schweitzer's studies in theology, philosophy, and music, and his eventual calling to aid the people of Lambaréné. Schweitzer's work among the sufferers of malaria, sleeping sickness, and leprosy is especially poignant considering the extreme difficulties of working with impoverished people in the rain forest of equatorial Africa in the early 1900s. Schweitzer gave more than 50 years of service, enduring two world wars and eventually dying in the place he had grown to love. VERDICT The addition of fictional characters and dialog makes this more of a story than a serious research piece on Schweitzer, but general readers who enjoy a popular approach to Christian spiritual narrative will enjoy this.—Holly Hebert, Brentwood P.L., TN

Book Details

Published
March 26, 2013
Publisher
Nelson, Thomas, Inc.
Pages
186
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9781595550798

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