Craig Yorke
Steep: A Black Neurosurgeon's Journey
Retired neurosurgeon and credible violinist
Topeka, KS
BOOK COVER
BOOK DETAILS
Pub Date: 2025
Genre: Memoir
Publisher: Flint Hills Publishing
Page Count: 176
Format: Paperback, Hardcover, Ebook
ISBN: 9781953583987 (PB), 9781966323013 (HC), 9781966323006 (eBook)
Price: $16.99 (PB), $22.00 (HC), $6.99 (eBook)
ABOUT THE BOOK
“This moving memoir recounts Craig Yorke’s steep climb from a poor Boston neighborhood to the University of California San Francisco’s world-renowned neurosurgical program. A gifted violinist who might have filled concert halls instead of operating rooms, he chose to exercise his virtuosity in caring for patients with neurosurgical disease. Steep offers a rare window into the emotional and ethical terrain of a life spent on the front lines of life and death. Steep sands alongside the best medical memoirs—riveting, profound, and unforgettable.” —Dr. Paul Camarata, Chairman, Department of Neurosurgery and Chair, Neurosurgery, The University of Kansas Medical Center
Steep traces an odyssey from a gritty Boston neighborhood to a neurosurgical practice in Middle America. It’s more about the price of success than the weight of bigotry – a story of resilience and self-discovery that will resonate with anyone who has wrestled with their past as they chased the American Dream.
The word “steep” has two meanings: the adjective that conjures a precipitous climb—or descent, but also the verb that connotes a ripening or maturing over time. Both definitions are evident in Yorke’s story, one that will resonate with anyone who’s run from their past, anyone whose world feels too small.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Dr. Craig Yorke was born in Roxbury, Massachusetts. He received a BA from Harvard College in 1970 and an MD from Harvard Medical School in 1974. His parental directive insisted he avenge centuries of bigotry with a life of infinite success.
After a neurosurgical residency at the University of California at San Francisco, he and his wife Mary found their way to an unlikely destination. He practiced in Topeka, Kansas, for 25 years, wrestling with his history and the armored identity it had imposed. He and Mary raised two admirable boys, Zack who lives in Brooklyn and Chris who calls Seattle home.
Dr. Yorke brews coffee for two each morning in the colonial home they’ve occupied for 33 years. He’s a credible violinist, having played the Bruch G Minor concerto with the Boston Pops at 17, and hits tennis balls with passion. Steep is his first book.
TIMELY TIE-INS
March
- National Reading Month
- National Write Your Story Day – 14
- Doctor Patient Trust Day – 17
- Doctors’ Day – 30
April
- National Minority Health Month
- World Health Day – 7
- World Neurosurgeons Day – 8
- National Library Week – 19-25
May
- Older Americans Month
- Personal History Awareness Month
SUGGESTED INTERVIEW QUESTIONS
- How did you come to write Steep? Where did the title come from?
- Please explain the unusual image on the cover of your book.
- Who are your readers? And what do you hope they take from the book?
- This is your first book. What surprised you most about the process and why?
- Was there anything that you wanted to include in the book, but could not?
- Race and politics permeate Steep – what’s your take on our current situation?
- You write that you were raised to be a weapon. more about that.
- What was the price of your success? And the value?
- What should people know about neurosurgery that they can’t learn from The Pitt?
- You were a bicoastal, driven guy. How did you wind up in Topeka, Kansas? And why have you stayed?
- As you look back 77 years, what would you do differently?
- You open your book with a quote from James Baldwin: “The great force of history comes from the fact that we carry it within us, are unconsciously controlled by it.” As you look back on your career and life, do you agree?
PRAISE
“Yorke’s concise memoir doesn’t provide a comprehensive biography; instead, the author uses carefully chosen anecdotes that connect to larger themes of American history, from his parent’s admiration of W.E.B. DuBois to his personal analysis of James Baldwin. Stories from his medical career are equally poignant…”
—Kirkus Reviews
“Craig Yorke’s deeply thoughtful autobiography is a startlingly honest look at what it was like to grow up as a Black man of whom much was expected in the 20th century…. This slender volume is a remarkable testament to an individual’s ability to process everything, good and bad, that’s led them to where they are today.”
—The Frumious Consortium
“A provocative book about Dr. Yorke’s personal journey from childhood, adhering to his parents’ dreams and plans for him, focusing on excellence in school, music, and athletic pursuits throughout childhood and his professional career. I found Steep a thoughtful reflection on life lessons and a compelling read.”
—Kathleen Sebelius, former Governor of Kansas and U.S. Secretary of Health & Human Services
“This moving memoir recounts Craig Yorke’s steep climb from the poorest neighborhoods of Boston to the University of California San Francisco’s world-renowned neurosurgical program. A gifted violinist who might have filled concert halls instead of operating rooms, he chose to exercise his virtuosity in caring for patients with neurosurgical disease. Steep offers a rare window into the emotional and ethical terrain of a life spent on the front lines of life and death. Steep sands alongside the best medical memoirs—riveting, profound, and unforgettable.”
—Dr. Paul Camarata,Chairman, Department of Neurosurgery and Chair, Neurosurgery, The University of Kansas Medical Center
“A fascinating memoir by a distinguished Black neurosurgeon. But it is more than that; it’s also evidence that professional achievement along with self-respect can bolster one’s “armor” against racist condescension. A Boston Latin School and Harvard University graduate who received his surgical training in San Francisco, Dr. Yorke moved to Topeka, Kansas, to seize the opportunity to work with the renowned Menninger Foundation and to meet the community’s need for a neurosurgeon. Dr. Yorke is a masterful storyteller.”
—Bill Tuttle, Professor Emeritus of American Studies at the University of Kansas and the author of several books, notably including “Daddy’s Gone to War”: The Second World War in the Lives of America’s Children
“Steep is no less a profound meditation on the toll it takes to stand before the steep wall of lowering historical forces and the determination, discipline, and drive necessary in scaling it. What awaits at the summit, however, is unexpected; the ultimate reward of the author’s journey upward is freedom—liberating self-knowledge and compassion for the struggles of others. Steep is about discovering what it is to become truly human. I can only hope that this, the author’s first book, is not his last.”
—Tobias Schlingensiepen, member of the Kansas House of Representatives, Senior Pastor First Congregational Church, Topeka, Kansas
BOOK DETAILS
Pub Date: May 17, 2022
Genre: Memoir / Christian Inspirational
Publisher: She Writes Press
Page Count: 304
Format: Paperback
ISBN: 978-1647429003
Price: $15.99
