Christine Elaine Montross (born 1973) is an American medical doctor and writer. First a published poet and a high school teacher, she later took up medical studies, and became an assistant professor of psychiatry and human behavior at Brown University's Alpert Medical School. She is the recipient of a 2015 Guggenheim Fellowship.
Personal life and early career
Montross was born to Scott and Janice Montross.[1] She is a sister of former NBA basketball player and sports commentator Eric Montross.[2]
Montross' first book, Body of Work: Meditations on Mortality from the Human Anatomy Lab, is a memoir of her time as a medical student. She wrote it during her first year at Brown.[5] A major theme of Body of Work is the reactions of Montross and her student colleagues to their first dissection of a human corpse, which they nickname "Eve".[6][7] More broadly, Montross also discusses the history of anatomy, including her visit to Padua to see the laboratory where Andreas Vesalius performed the dissections which led to his influential work on human anatomy, De humani corporis fabrica.[8] Montross appeared on C-SPAN's Q&A for an interview with Brian Lamb about the book.[9] Rachel Hartigan Shea of The Washington Post praised Body of Work as "a beautiful book" which "offers of a place off limits to anyone without Montross's clearsighted courage", while Katie Roiphe of The New York Times Book Review named it an Editor's Choice.[6][10]
Falling Into the Fire
Montross received the MacColl Johnson Fellowship in 2010, using the award money to conduct research in Paris on the origins of psychiatric treatment and to begin work on a collection of poetry, tentatively titled Lunacy and Light.[11] That project evolved into Falling Into the Fire: A Psychiatrist's Encounters with the Mind in Crisis, a nonfiction work that discusses mental disorders in a series of case studies.[12][13][14] The profiles are interspersed with anecdotes from Montross's domestic life.
Waiting for an Echo: The Madness of American Incarceration