Down to the bone A leukemia story

Catherine Pioli, 1982-2017

Book - 2022

"A narrative, in graphic novel format, of the author's life and experiences as a leukemia patient"--

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Subjects
Genres
Autobiographical comics
Nonfiction comics
Graphic novels
Autobiographies
Published
University Park, PA : Graphic Mundi [2022]
Language
English
French
Main Author
Catherine Pioli, 1982-2017 (author)
Other Authors
J. T. Mahany (translator)
Item Description
Original title: Globules et conséquences / Catherine Pioli. Editions Glénat, 2018.
Physical Description
146 pages : color illustrations ; 27 cm
ISBN
9781637790342
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

When freelance artist Catherine visits a hospital to find answers for her painful sciatica, she instead receives a leukemia diagnosis. And so starts many months of sterile, isolated hospital rooms, medicine regimens, hair and weight loss, awkward conversations, and fear. While the topic is one where seriousness and darkness are common, author Pioli's heartfelt, straightforward storytelling provides much appreciated humor balancing the emotional ride. Lightly sketched environments and backgrounds focus the reader's attention squarely on the characters, their emotions, and their experiences. This lends the portrayal an intimate note as we are right there with Catherine during her surgery or while shaving her head or worrying about her constant exhaustion and underweight frame. Pioli frequently explains the science behind her diagnosis and treatments with clear, accessible text and illustrations. Pages feature the most adorable blast cells (with axes and pacifiers) anyone has ever seen. The book wraps up with the need for donors and how that process works for anyone interested. Overall, readers will find this a highly informative and personal work.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Corsican artist Pioli records her own leukemia treatment in this gorgeous graphic memoir, published posthumously. After months of pain due to sciatica, which treatments fail to improve, Catherine checks in to a hospital for further tests in 2014. When the doctors discover she has acute lymphocytic leukemia, she's rushed to chemotherapy. She explains the science behind the disease and treatment (including a concise explanation on preserving her ovary) while also detailing the experiences of bored isolation, drastic weight loss, and cravings for forbidden foods. Treatment progresses, but not as well as doctors would like, leaving Catherine in limbo until they green-light her brother's bone marrow transplant. Tender moments with her partner Sébastien mingle with humor, like her whimsical haircuts and cheeky reliance on her "leukemia card" to avoid tasks. Pioli places her stylized, full-color characters in lightly outlined backgrounds. Her skills in rendering emotional states and medical symptoms made visible on the page is particularly impressive. Blending precise and educational details about the medicine (and its limits) for cancer care with touching personal vignettes, the work has potential to humanize patient care for practitioners as well as add to the "cancer memoir" genre. It's a stunning example of what graphic medicine can do. (Dec.)

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