Meet Dr. Iwan James: cyclist, doctor, would-be lover, former heavy metal fan, and, above all, human being. Weighed down by his responsibilities--from diagnosing personality disorders to deciding who can hold a gun license--he doubts his ability to make decisions about the lives of others when he may need more than a little help himself. Cartoonist and doctor Ian Williams introduces us to Iwan's troubled life as all humanity, it seems, passes through his surgery doors.
Twitter account of the Centre for Health, Humanities and Science at the University of Bristol (UK) and the Medical Humanities strand.
2/2 And then, for something a touch more academic, The Graphic Medicine Manifesto — Czerwiec, Williams et al. We'd add The Bad Doctor and The Lady Doctor by Ian Williams to that list, and, as a good way into thinking about the medium, Understanding Comics by Scott McCloud. https://t.co/QrSHfLEwzT
comics, graphic novels and art books enjoyed with a coffee
New in: The Lady Doctor This hilarious, warts-and-all follow-up to Ian Williams' graphic novel The Bad Doctor is an entertainingly realistic look at rural medicine and the unique personalities it attracts https://t.co/53mOdcfpXj
#comics artist, GP, author of ‘The Bad Doctor’ and ‘The Lady Doctor’. Father, #ocd wrangler, founder of https://t.co/d0kzQczpmj #graphicmedicine
If you don’t own a copy of my first graphic novel, The Bad Doctor, you can get it on @AmazonKindle right now at a 70% discount until the end of August. #graphicmedicine #comics #MedEd #medicalhumanities #healthhumanities #generalpractice https://t.co/Hb5eT9vb1o
"A helpful, insightful adventure into the dynamic of the doctor-patient relationship. The Bad Doctor's elegant renderings illuminate the mind and explore the relationships that don't always have a happy ending."
--Ron Turner, Last Gasp Comics
"Skillfully told, relentlessly honest, often funny, and painfully true . . . this is courageous work. It undercuts the accepted nonsense that doctors are--or should be expected to be--seraphic beings, exalted above the rest of humanity. It should be read by every student and practicing professional out there, and in the larger world as well. Ian Williams is my hero and I wish he were my doctor, too!"
--David Small, author of Stitches: A Memoir
"This unputdownable graphic novel, like all great literature, makes you feel slightly less alone. Ian Williams gently points out what's under our noses but what we might not yet have managed to articulate. It shows us--through good observation and by being funny--how the ordinary is extraordinary."
--Philippa Perry, author of Couch Fiction: A Graphic Tale of Psychotherapy
"Gentle, thoughtful, humorous, and with a real light touch."
--Bryan Talbot, author of The Adventures of Luther Arkwright
"Amazing. . . . Crafted with a consistent wit in which the cartoon narrator spares himself no less than his patients. This profoundly honest doctor pursues his humanitarian mission while exorcising personal demons. Ian Williams gives us a dose of insight and laughter that is germane not only to the comics medium but also to medicine itself."
--Justin Green, author of Binky Brown Meets the Holy Virgin Mary
"A richly humane picture of a good man who can't appreciate how good he is."
--Publishers Weekly
"An unusually affecting little story, and a pioneering one at that. . . . The territory of doctor as patient has been visited before, but Dr. Williams's iteration and its resolution are as subtle and thought provoking as the best of them."
--Abigail Zuger, M.D. New York Times
"Ian Williams is the best thing to happen to medicine since penicillin."
--Alison Bechdel,2014 MacArthur Fellow
"This serious yet sometimes puckish slice-of-life drama makes the 'revered physician' into an everyman who evokes sympathy from readers, doctors or not. Those fond of reality-based stories will enjoy this."
--Martha Cornog Library Journal
"Williams, a physician, visual artist, and illustrator, paints a very human portrait of his main character, touching on themes such as 'difficult patients, ' physician burnout, mental illness, medical bureaucracy, and personal and professional clashes among doctors."
--Jessica Bylander Health Affairs