Ben Daitz MD is professor in the department of family, community, and emergency medicine at the University of New Mexico, Albuquerque. He is also a distinguished documentary filmmaker, an accomplished fiddle player, and a regular contributor to the science section of The New York Times.
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Description
""Delivery" is a fascinating, strangely luminescent and disturbing novel, written with great insight and compassion and a powerful love of New Mexico. It is a highly original and polished work that starts quietly and builds into a page turner impossible to put down...This first novel by Ben Daitz is accomplished, beautiful, and sure to instantly become a proud part of our distinguished Southwest literary tradition." "Calvin is the focal point of "Delivery" and is a metaphor for the imperfections and struggles of each character in this unflinchingly realistic story of survival and hope in an unforgiving landscape of despair." "Daitz examines the many facets of tragedy with grace, authenticity, and empathy. Dark and unstinting, but nonetheless infused with human warmth, "Delivery" is an impressive debut by a serious writer willing to ask big questions without apology or restraint." "I like Ben's book, "Delivery," because it gets on with the story and doesn't try to spin off a politically correct fable, or straddle the fictional fence sacrificing the truth of his characters--it's about an Anglo doctor in a Hispanic village, and it strikes out in dangerous territory in southwestern fiction. Only a few books have handled the Anglo/Hispanic cross-over well. Ben does it superbly, with a fifteen round knock-out. A sheer pleasure to read!" ""Delivery," by Ben Daitz, is a richly satisfying first novel." ""Delivery" is a spotlight on real people dealing with real hardships, and is compelling reading." ""Delivery" offers a serious and valuable portrait of the underside of the Land of Enchantment." "Daitz's powers of observation as a physician are displayed in his vividly descriptive passages. He can lyrically evoke the desert landscape, which in it beauty, can be a balm for the harsh realities of life. He is also adept at placing the reader into scene and action."

