The rez doctor

Gitz Crazyboy

Book - 2024

"In this uplifting story, a young Indigenous man overcomes hardship to fulfill his dream of becoming a doctor. Young Ryan Fox gets good grades, but he's not sure what he wants to be when he grows up. It isn't until he meets a Blackfoot doctor during a school assembly that he starts to dream big. However, becoming a doctor isn't easy. University takes Ryan away from his family and the Siksikaitsitapi community, and without their support, he begins to struggle. Faced with more stress than he's ever experienced, he turns to partying. Distracted from his responsibilities, his grades start to slip. His bills pile up. Getting into med school feels impossible. And now his beloved uncle is in jail. Can Ryan regain his footi...ng to walk the path he saw so clearly as a boy? This inspiring graphic novel for young adults is based on a true story."--

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GRAPHIC NOVEL/Crazyboy
0 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor Comics New GRAPHIC NOVEL/Crazyboy (NEW SHELF) Due Jan 2, 2025
Subjects
Genres
Graphic novels
Coming-of-age comics
Published
Winnipeg, Manitoba : HighWater Press [2024]
Language
English
Main Author
Gitz Crazyboy (author)
Other Authors
Veronika Barinova (artist), Azby Whitecalf (colorist), Toben Racicot (letterer)
Item Description
Written by Gitz Crazyboy, artwork by Veronika Barinova, coloured by Azby Whitecalf, lettered by Toben Racicot.
Physical Description
59 pages : chiefly color illustrations ; 26 cm
Audience
610L
ISBN
9781553799245
Contents unavailable.
Review by School Library Journal Review

Gr 8 Up--An inspiring graphic novel that follows the true-life story of a young boy living in the Siksikaitsitapi First Nations community in Alberta, Canada. Ryan Fox lives in a community divided by the legacy of colonialism. Although he is an eager student, he struggles to find his path in an unsupportive academic environment where prejudice and racism are all too common. During a school assembly, he is inspired by a doctor with Blackfoot heritage to pursue medicine. With the support of his family, he pursues higher education and faces many trials and tribulations, common for young people far from their communities. All is not lost as Ryan finds a supportive partner named Charm who guides him in the right direction. After completing medical school, the story ends with Ryan starting his first medical residency. Full-color, classic comic book-style illustrations show the changes as Ryan grows and develops through many adventures, ordeals, and accomplishments. VERDICT Providing young readers with an example of success in the face of struggle and failure, this graphic novel would be a good addition to any collection.--Meaghan Nichols

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

When white doctors neglect the Siksikaitsitapi (Blackfoot) community's needs, a young man discovers his calling to be a doctor, but the path is not always straightforward. As a child in 1990s Alberta, Ryan Fox visited the medical clinic in Cardston, where he and his mother were treated dismissively. Growing up on the rez, Ryan attended school in a nearby majority-white town, where Indigenous people experienced pervasive racism. Fortunately, Ryan's family's pride in him and his connection to his community had a profound impact. A ceremony he attended with his father, in which a man who'd formerly abused alcohol received a headdress from elders in recognition that he had begun "to heal himself, and now he has duties, responsibilities, and obligations to help the community heal too," serves as both warning and foretelling of Ryan's life journey. Away at college in Lethbridge, Ryan experiences peer pressure to drink and party--but he falls in love with a young woman who's a serious student. Along with Ryan's loving, incarcerated uncle, she helps him recommit to his goals, despite his despair over his falling grades. With guidance from the Creator, Ryan returns to his path, eventually becoming a doctor and working to support First Nations communities. The accessible text consists primarily of dialogue and is complemented by skillfully composed, thought-provoking illustrations that show the impact of painful topics like substance abuse, medical assault, and racism against Indigenous peoples. An empowering telling of a journey to healing. (Graphic fiction. 14-18) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.