An astronomer turned psychiatrist, Jaime Smith traces his education back to his early studies in the humanities and a life-changing move to Argentina as a young researcher photographing faint blue stars. Returning with his family to the US for graduate studies and then on to British Columbia to teach university courses, Smith ultimately segued into medicine, beginning a decades long career as a psychiatrist at the forefront of the AIDS epidemic in Vancouver, BC. Drawing from a background in diverse fields of study, Smith’s memoir, Foxtrot, gets new life alongside a collection of essays that explore topics ranging from quantum mechanics and philosophy to literature, linguistics, and systems of belief. For Smith, it is the production, acquisition and playful interaction with knowledge that makes us human. Stardust reflects Smith’s never-ending engagement with that pursuit.
Editions:
ISBN: 9781989467305 (paperback). $19.95 CDN, $17.95 USD
Size: 6 x 9 inches
Pages: 274
Available via your local bookstore, Amazon.ca, and Chapters-Indigo
ISBN: 9781989467312 (ebook). $9.99 CDN, $7.99 USD. Available via Bookbaby or Amazon Kindle
Reviews / Testimonials:
This is a thinking person’s book by a clever and thoughtful writer. He can understand anything that engages his interest and there is much that does. Flipping through the pages we find short essays on Nordic noir crime fiction, Atheism, Wagner’s operas, Confucius, Cannibalism, Slavery, Human rights and much more. Dip into the book anywhere and you will find food for thought. Is there anything he hasn’t read? Best of all, along with his professional expertise in physics, astronomy, medicine and psychiatry Jaime Smith knows how to write for the lay reader, using simple language, salted with wit and humour.
—Dr. George O. Mackie
Professor Emeritus, University of Victoria
Grounded both in a diary kept since the mid-1950s and by his over half century long relationship with his remarkable spouse Cathleen, Smith’s memoir traces the contours of an extraordinary and thoroughly idiosyncratic life that is guided by an enthusiasm for embracing new intellectual, physical and affective challenges. The eclectic essay collection that follows is not for the faint of mind, but is delectable reading for those who prize a relentless and uncompromising thoughtfulness, often with a Borgesian twist.
—Dr. Peggy Day
Professor of Religion and Culture, University of Winnipeg
Media related:
The Ormsby Review article can be read here.
ABC Bookworld article. Review from BC Bookworld by Josef Grubisic