The Bellevue Literary Press' first four titles this spring included a novel interweaving themes of sickness and recovery into a 1940s family drama; a collection of editorial cartoons by an accomplished physician-artist; an experimental nonfiction work that explored the mind-set and meaning of awkwardness, and "Galileo's Gout: Science in an Age of Endarkenment," written by New York University School of Medicine professor Dr. Gerald Weissman.
The press plans to release four more books, including another novel, this fall.
Publishing insiders say the move from medicine to manuscripts is unusual and possibly unique. The Cleveland Clinic in Ohio and some other medical institutions produce health guides and similar work, but nothing as literary as Bellevue's offerings.
And none carry the particular weight of Bellevue - a name freighted with near-Gothic associations, although the publishers see some benefits.



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