Dr. Heidenhoff's Process
About This Book
A small-town setting introduces a young man tormented by a past dishonor who seeks release from remorse through the intervention of an experimental physician. The doctor develops a procedure that removes specific painful memories, and its application alters the patient's temperament and relationships. As neighbors react and the subject's behavior shifts, the narrative traces consequences for personal identity, moral responsibility, and communal judgment, posing questions about whether relief from suffering justifies erasing the past and how memory shapes conscience. The account balances intimate scenes and philosophical reflection to explore the benefits and dangers of medically altering memory.
About the Author
More Books by This Author
6 picks





