Three Stages of Life. One Unfiltered Voice.

Wednesday’s Child is a bold three-part memoir by Alan N. DeCarlo, M.D., tracing youth, manhood, and old age through the eyes of a physician who writes with candor, dark wit, and sharp reflection.

About Alan N. DeCarlo, M.D.

Alan N. DeCarlo, M.D., is a physician and writer whose work is shaped by decades of medical experience and a lifelong habit of close observation. In Wednesday’s Child, he brings those instincts together to write not simply about events, but about what those events reveal about people, systems, and the uneasy realities of living, aging, and remembering. 

His background in medicine gives the trilogy its clinical precision, but his voice is anything but detached. DeCarlo writes with irony, intensity, skepticism, and emotional honesty. He openly describes the books as realistic, inductively reasoned, intentionally irreverent, and purposefully iconoclastic, inviting readers to question inherited beliefs and examine life without comforting illusions. 

Why Read This Book?

This trilogy offers an unfiltered, thought-provoking journey through one man’s life, shaped by medicine, memory, and hard-earned perspective. It does not aim to comfort. It aims to make you think, reflect, and see life a little differently.

Raw Honesty

Written without filters, this book explores life as it is, not as it is usually presented. It confronts aging, regret, belief, and human behavior with clarity and directness that feels rare and real.

Lived Experience

Drawn from decades in medicine and personal life, every page is grounded in firsthand experience. The insights come from real moments, real people, and situations that carry emotional and intellectual weight.

Perspective Across a Lifetime

Spanning youth, manhood, and old age, the trilogy shows how life evolves over time. It reveals how priorities shift, how understanding deepens, and how meaning changes as you move forward.

About the Wednesday’s Child Trilogy

A Story of Reflection, Insight, and Personal Journey

Wednesday’s Child is a three-part autobiographical series that follows the arc of a life through Youth, Manhood, and Old Age. More than a memoir, Alan N. DeCarlo describes the work as a kind of para-biography, using his own experiences as an anchor point for larger reflections on learning, ambition, illness, family, relationships, burnout, mortality, and the strange contradictions that shape a human life. 

Written from firsthand experience, the trilogy is rooted in DeCarlo’s long medical career, but it reaches far beyond medicine. These books move through personal history, cultural observation, philosophical reflection, and blunt social critique. The result is a work that feels intimate, provocative, and often unexpectedly funny. 

This is a trilogy for readers who want something honest. Not softened. Not performative. Just one life, told as clearly and as truthfully as memory allows.

Books in the Series

Explore the complete Wednesday’s Child trilogy, where each volume captures a different stage of life. Together, they form a continuous journey through memory, experience, and reflection.

Part One: Youth
The Beginning

The first volume introduces the foundation of a life shaped by family, early identity, and formative experiences. It explores childhood, belief systems, and the origins of perspective that carry forward into adulthood.

Part Two: Manhood
Deeper Reflections

This volume moves into responsibility, ambition, and the realities of adult life. Through the lens of medical training and career pressures, it examines stress, growth, failure, and the weight of decision-making.

Part Three: Old Age
Coming Soon

The final volume reflects on aging, memory, regret, and acceptance. It brings together a lifetime of experiences to explore what remains when everything is viewed in hindsight.

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A Journey Through Insight & Reflection

This trilogy explores life through direct experience, shaped by memory, medicine, and observation. Each volume moves deeper into the realities of living, questioning beliefs, and understanding how perspective changes over time. It is not just a story, but a reflection on what it means to think, grow, and confront life as it is.

Unfiltered Perspective

Clear, direct reflections that challenge assumptions and encourage deeper thinking about life, belief, and human behavior.

Personal Experience

Rooted in real events and decades of lived experience, each chapter carries weight, honesty, and emotional depth.

Lasting Impact

Ideas that stay with you beyond the final page, offering perspective on memory, aging, and the meaning found in everyday life.

What Readers Are Saying

Readers of Wednesday’s Child respond to its candor, intelligence, and refusal to look away from life’s harder truths.

“Fearless, reflective, and impossible to confuse with a conventional memoir. This trilogy says the quiet parts out loud.”

– Samantha

“A physician’s life story, yes, but also something larger: a meditation on memory, mortality, family, and the strange comedy of being human.”

– Robert Wright

“Sharp, irreverent, and extremely thoughtful. It reads like one man’s life examined under bright light with nothing politely hidden.”

– Natasha

“What stayed with me most was the voice. Honest, skeptical, funny, wounded, and very alive.”

– George

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