"Noise, blood and adrenalin, pressure, excitement and money-Tooth and Nail gives the reader a ringside seat alongside a young doctor as she treats injured boxers in a succession of brutal professional bouts. Linda Dahl is one of those rare writers who, like the fighters she cares for, has strength and style, grit and grace."Judy Melinek, M.D., New York Times bestselling co-author with T.J. Mitchell of Working Stiff
"In describing in vivid detail the most violent of human sports, Dr Linda Dahl exposes her life of violence-in her family, in her surgical training, and in doctoring New York's elite-and how she learned, from the most unlikely of sources within and outside of the boxing ring, to transform herself from observer and willing victim of violence towards self-awareness, self-confidence, and mastery of her craft. Well-written, compelling, and revealing, Tooth and Nail provides unvarnished insights about power, sexuality, professional identity, and personal transformation-in the ring and in the clinic."-Ronald Epstein, M.D., author of Attending
“The human face was not built to be punched, but if you’re a boxer, that’s unavoidable—and you’re going to need some first-rate doctoring to put you back together as the need arises. Most of us don’t think much about the work fight doctors do, which is why we’re fortunate that Linda D. Dahl, the rare female M.D. to work the professional fight circuit, has written this smart, funny, poignant account of what she saw and learned in locker rooms, gyms and on the ringsides of bouts. It’s a tale of medicine and feminism and quirky characters in dramatic settings. And it’s one that may make you look at boxing in a new way. “I felt raw and alive,” Dahl writes about her emotions after working a fight. “This violence didn’t seem wrong. It seemed honest. It gave these men an outlet I didn’t have…” Love boxing or hate boxing, you will tumble for this book.—Jeffrey Kluger, author of Apollo 13 and Apollo 8
“It’s strange: I hate boxing but I love this book. Dahl’s tale of identity, femininity and power shines brightly as proof that inspiration and mentorship can spring from the unlikeliest of sources. I rooted for her every step along the way and, at the end, had to applaud her for pioneering an odd but compelling genre of memoir that I can only describe as ‘grit-glam.’”—Katrina Firlik, M.D., author of Another Day in the Frontal Lobe: A Brain Surgeon Exposes Life on the Inside
“Ever wonder what happens to a fighter after he’s been pummeled in the ring? Ever wonder what it’s like to be a woman trying to prove, even to herself, that she belongs in a male-dominated world? In Tooth and Nail, Linda Dahl pulls back the curtain on both. I was absolutely enthralled by Dahl’s journey from Upper East-Side physician to Madison Square Garden fight doctor, and you will be too. Rife with gender politics and one woman’s struggle to belong, this book is timely. But it’s also just a good story well-told. Read it.”—Kevin Hazzard, author of A Thousand Naked Strangers: A Paramedic's Wild Ride to the Edge and Back
"[An] entertaining memoir.... Dahl offers a unique look at the world of boxing in this uplifting story about realizing one’s destiny."—Publishers Weekly
"A fascinating tale."—Booklist
“Tooth and Nail tackles not only sexism but racism, classism, alienation, desperation and the practical benefits of cultivating an inner dominatrix. In examining the classic fight to survive with a lens that feels paradoxically universal and unique, Dahl has written a memoir with enough fisticuffs for the fight fan, enough medicine for the scalpel supplicant and enough human drama for anyone who has ever felt alienated.”—Paste Magazine
“A delightfully colorful memoir… Dahl recounts her journey, starting with her Midwestern roots to becoming a doctor with some of the best stories at any dinner table.”—Washington Post's The Lily
“Funny, candid and easy to follow. Dahl talks boxing, but the book is more of a memoir about a young woman's quest to succeed on her terms.”—The Oklahoman