This is a serious and important volume. It makes explicit what is often hidden, the manifold ways in which temporality enters into the provision of healthcare. How we anticipate appointments, how the duration of lived time, in disease, is structured, either fractionated or endured, and how the future, the horizon, encroaches or recedes in the context of distress. But it is not only the patients who forebear, showing restraint when dealing with delays, who tolerate unexpected changes and suffer pain and hardship. The doctors and nurses, too, remain steadfast not necessarily resigned in the face of the crisis of provision. This book is rich in ideas, it is also stimulating and intensely invigorating to read. I found myself attentive, enthralled, and engaged throughout. Above all, reading it was time well spent.