“Douglas Jolly was a significant innovator in war surgery, laying the foundations for the damage control emergency surgery currently practiced by military surgeons and organizations such as the International Committee of the Red Cross and Doctors Without Borders. . . . This is a valuable and engaging account, both medical and historical, of the brilliant surgeon Doug Jolly.”-Jean-Pierre Letoquart, surgical advisor for Doctors Without Borders France “Douglas Jolly’s writings provided crucial instruction for British and American surgeons during the Second World War. This superbly researched and compellingly readable biography will be warmly welcomed by both historians of medicine and more general specialists in both wars.”-Paul Preston, author of <i>The Spanish Holocaust: Inquisition and Extermination in Twentieth-Century Spain</i>
Frontline Surgeon traces Jolly’s remarkable career from medical training in 1920s New Zealand, postgraduate study during the rise of fascism in Europe, almost a decade of frontline surgery, and into civilian life as medical director of Britain’s largest hospital for amputees. One of the greatest war surgeons of the twentieth century, Jolly has been mysteriously omitted from the ranks of pioneers of modern medicine. This engaging biography, intensively researched in many countries, both explains and redresses that omission.