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Psychiatric Tales

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This books delves inside the mysteries of mental disorders - presenting explanations and recollections using the cartoonist's own experiences as both a psychiatric and care nurse and as someone who himself has suffered from depression.Being able to see the issue from both sides allows Darryl to present matters in a forthright and instantly accessible way which will allow many to understand the trials of both sufferers and those connected to them - perhaps for the first time. Topics covered include Bi-polar disorder, self harming, suicide, depression and theauthor also shows how for some famous people mental disorders were part of what may have made them great. Frank, hard hitting and moving.

120 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 2010

26 people are currently reading
2372 people want to read

About the author

Darryl Cunningham

17 books130 followers
British Artist Darryl Cunningham is the creator of the web-comics, 'Super-Sam and John-of-the-Night' and 'The Streets of San Diablo'. Darryl's work can also be found at his blog and flickr page. His book Psychiatric Tales has been published by Blank Slate in the UK and by Bloomsbury in the US.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 340 reviews
Profile Image for Dov Zeller.
Author 2 books125 followers
February 18, 2017
I was so looking forward to reading this but once I picked it up it didn't take long for me to reach my limit of tolerance. The stories are not considered and explored in a way that I found interesting or satisfying and instead it just feels like Cunningham is in pedantic lecture mode. Raina's GR review got to a lot of my feelings about it, but she is more generous in her assessment, which I appreciate. Here is a quote from her review:

"Generally, though, this felt very didactic to me. The anecdotes or 'stories' of Cunningham's experience generally take up less than half of each chapter, with statements teaching the reader about mental illness filling up the bulk of the book. Which would probably be helpful to a lot of people who haven't been exposed to many mental illness issues. But to me, it sometimes came off as a zine version of a 'be sensitive to people who struggle with this' tract."


Profile Image for Paul Bryant.
2,413 reviews12.6k followers
October 15, 2013

This book is tiny. 175 pages, read it in one hour. It’s like a beginner’s guide to the most common mental illnesses and even though it’s on lots of best-graphic-novelly-things which is why I got it, since I’m an ignorant blunderer in the garden of comix, I wasn't knocked out. We get chapters on dementia, self-harming, depression, personality disorder, schizophrenia and bipolar. A definition, the currently recommended treatment, a quick character sketch of a patient encountered by the author, and on to the next.

GO VASCULAR

A very close relative of mine had vascular dementia so that ailment is one I know about. It was quite a kindly dementia, there was no hostility, no distress, it was just like a long fade-out on a favourite record. She gradually lost the ability to form words but she was quite happy to chat away in approximate sounds, to which we had to nod along and smile. The incomprehensible vocalising had the exact same timbre as a real conversation, her voice rising and falling and emphasising some sounds – somewhere in her mind she was making perfect sense, and – strangely – so were we when we talked to her about the weather or ourselves. If it wasn’t so peculiar and distressing it would have been poignant and almost funny, like something out of Gormenghast. She never noticed that anything was amiss. It went on for months like until eventually the strange non-conversations petered out and she lapsed into silence. And soon after that the kindly gentlemen with the black cloak gathered her up.

So if you’re going to get dementia, go with vascular, that’s my tip.

STIGMA

Mr Cunningham’s book is mostly a polemic against stigmatising mental health sufferers, and this is of course a very good thing, but it shirks confronting a very real problem. He says :

We don’t tolerate racism and sexism these days, but people with mental health problems are still fair game. Mockery, discrimination and stigma persist, despite research showing mental illness to be as real as any other illness.

I thought that was a strange thing to say. Who doesn’t think that mental illness is “as real as any other illness”? Who needs any research to prove that? Is he talking about a coven of Szasz and R D Laing followers who deny that there is such a thing as insanity? No, I think he means the regular public, who sometimes aren’t sympathetic.

Many people still believe mental illness to be a failure of character and self-discipline he complains. What he doesn’t address is that mental illness is not black and white, it’s the ten thousand shades between, and it’s hard for many people to spot that this person is a wild and fun-loving type who sometimes burns out and gets depressed, but that person has bi-polar; this person is a self-indulgent whiner who everyone tiptoes around, but that person is suffering from depression. It’s hard enough for the professionals to give a definite diagnosis sometimes, so the general public may be forgiven for not immediately medicalising their fellows. So yes, sometimes people are still told to snap out of it when they can't.

As opposed to people stigmatising mental health, in some sections of society many people are very keen to pathologise their own behaviour, such as those involved in the addiction industry. And check this quote from an essay by the prison doctor Theodore Dalrymple – it’s from one of his essays :

Another burglar demanded to know from me why he repeatedly broke into houses and stole VCRs. He asked the question aggressively as if "the system" had so far let him down in not supplying him with the answer, as if it were my duty as a doctor to provide him with the buried psychological secret that, once revealed, would in and of itself lead him unfailingly on the path of virtue. Until then he would continue to break into houses and the blame would be mine.

THE LAST CHAPTER

Is called How I Lived Again and recounts DC’s own painful struggles with anxiety and depression, which ended his career as a psychiatric nurse. When I read that, I thought – you know, I really shouldn’t be saying such critical things about this book – look at what this poor guy went through.

But … in an unexpected way, the new Goodreads rules came to my rescue. I have to put all thoughts about the author out of my mind and just, you know, concentrate on the book. Thanks for the reminder, Goodreads. If it wasn’t for you I would be feeling like a right bastard.


TEN GREAT SONGS ABOUT MENTAL ILLNESS


Cracking : Suzanne Vega

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r99jp...

Like the Weather : 10,000 Maniacs (sorry, that’s the name of the band)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=624gY...

Boys of Bedlam : Steeleye Span

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OZwVE...

Sleepy man Blues : Bukka White

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iqnU-...

19th nervous breakdown : stones

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wU1kT...

Love in a faithless country : Richard Thompson

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-htvF...

Like a monkey in a zoo : Vic Chestnutt

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZVMJO...

Feel : syd barrett

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kjIHF...

Thank You : Brian Wilson

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RPbpk...

Cloud my sunny mood : Dan Hicks

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2LMvI...


Profile Image for Sofia.
Author 4 books136 followers
April 20, 2011
Published on my book blog.

I got this book as a birthday gift from two dear friends of mine. We share many interests, and the workings of the human mind is one of them, so they figured this book would be a good match for me.

It's a good premise. The author spent a few years working as a health care assistant in a psychiatric hospital and draws on his experiences to tell short stories about mental illnesses. Unfortunately, I didn't like it as much I thought I would. I was hoping for an insightful look into this fascinating, often misunderstood world, but I felt that all the stories were superficial, with the exception of the author's own tale (the last story in the book). Many of the "stories" didn't even feel like stories at all, more like a textbook description with pictures accompanying it. I couldn't understand the constant mention of how people need to be more open-minded and tolerant towards mental illness. What's the point of saying that to a reader who is interested enough to try this book?

I can definitely see a heavy influence from Marjane Satrapi's Persepolis: The Story of a Childhood, both in graphic qualities and narrative, but this book lacks the profoundity and poignance that "Persepolis" has. Moreover, sometimes I felt like the drawings didn't even need to be there at all.

However, there were some positive points. The author's story was powerfully told (made me wish that the rest of the book was like that) and some of the personal stories of the patients he mentions are genuinely strange and interesting.

This is an ok book, and it's fairly interesting, but I do wish it dared to go deeper.
Profile Image for Kate.
Author 15 books900 followers
February 10, 2012
The concept of this book sounded interesting, but it wasn't quite what I was expecting. I had expected 11 stories about various patients the author/artist had worked with as a psychiatric nurse. Instead I got a brief overview of several types of mental illness (depression, schizophrenia, bipolar, etc) with several examples within each chapter (not full stories, but rather "I once worked with a patient who..."). It read more like a textbook in graphic novel form, telling about symptoms and stressing how mental illness should not be stigmatized. The final chapter told of the author's own struggle with mental illness.

Since I have a bachelor's in psychology, this book did not tell me a whole lot that I didn't already know. I find mental illness and psychiatric hospitals fascinating and I felt like some of the examples could have been fleshed out to full stories, and that would have interested me more. I'm not sure who would be a good audience for this book, since the information is really too general for an audience of mental health professionals, and I'm sure a lay person curious about mental illnesses would not seek this book out to learn about them.

I did think the stark black and white illustration style worked well with the subject matter, keeping the tone from getting too heavy as very serious things like suicide and cutting were discussed.
Profile Image for Melina Souza.
357 reviews1,970 followers
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April 7, 2018
Esse livro é um conjunto de histórias curtas sobre as experiências do Darryl Cunningham enquanto trabalhava como enfermeiro em um Hospital Psiquiátrico.

São 11 histórias curtas divididas em: 1. Dementia Ward; 2. Cut; 3. It could be you; 4. Darkness; 5. Anti-Social Personality Disorder; 6. People with mental ilness enrich our lives; 7. Blood; 8. Bipolar Disorder; 9. Schizophrenia; 10. Suicide; 11. How I lived again.

Acho extremamente importante produzir conteúdos para educar a população sobre saúde mental. Ainda há muito preconceito em relação a isso por conta de falta de informação.

Enquanto Darryl contava sobre suas experiências, ele fazia observações extremamente importantes como "auto-mutilação não é só para chamar atenção" (tradução livre) entre outras coisas que, infelizmente, estamos acostumados a escutar em relação a pessoas que têm diagnósticos de transtornos mentais.

Não é, como imagino que muitas pessoas que leram o livro esperavam, um guia super detalhado visando explicar de forma didática alguns transtornos mentais. Ele dá, sim, algumas explicações, mas é focado mais em sua experiência com alguns pacientes.

O que me incomodou um pouco foi a forma com que ele relatou alguns pacientes, pois acho que pode passar a impressão errada para quem não tem conhecimento na área de que todas as pessoas com o diagnóstico x vão se comportar dessa mesma forma. Cada pessoa é única e a forma com que algum transtorno/distúrbio/doença vai afetá-la é única. Como alguns casos relatados são meio chocantes, tenho receio de que isso pode ter um efeito contrário ao que ele queria quando escreveu o livro.
Profile Image for Drew Canole.
3,179 reviews44 followers
August 12, 2017
"understand the trials of both sufferers and those connected to them" - That pretty much sums up the book. Its a series of tales told by some guy who worked with the mentally ill. He wants the mentally healthy to appreciate mentally ill people, not be afraid of them, and accept them.

That's a noble cause, but it makes for a dull book and the book doesn't go beyond that attempt. I suffered from mental illness (psychosis, for lack of a more precise term, or lack of wanting to elaborate) for a short period a few years ago (Not to suggest that I'm fully recovered, I think mental illness will always be in effect, and a full 'relapse' is always a fear). I really wanted this comic book to be about the 'trips' that occur - I wouldn't mind writing a comic about my experiences.

Instead of something really fascinating, this is a book concerning an outsider writing about the external realities of people having mental illness symptoms (I wanted to simply write: 'with mental illness', or even better: 'the mentally ill', but I want to shy away from defining those people by their illness. They are not the illness, they just experience it.) - I'm a big fan of Erich Fromm, the psychologist, and how he always says mental illness is defined in relation to the norm, and is significant to the extent that it prevents the person from productive interactions with society (ie, having a job).

Anywho, I think that mental illness sufferers suffer because of how they are treated - to a great extent, but not completely - and this book suggest how the suffering can be reduced by us non-sufferers "understand[ing] the trials of both sufferers and those connected to them".

If you've read this far, you don't need to read this book - go read a real book on mental illness while wearing your empathetic boots.
Profile Image for Morgan.
51 reviews3 followers
May 24, 2020
This did not hit the mark for me, and I feel like Cunningham was not aware of the audience that he was writing too. The stories were small, and the lecture of giving up mental illness stigma large. Now, I am a huge proponent of getting rid of the stigma regarding mental illness; however, I don’t think many people that stigmatize mental illness would pick up a book with this title. This was further exacerbated by the chapter on suicide where it felt like Cunningham was not only being unsympathetic to those who have suffered the suicides and suicidal thoughts but blamed them for causing their family pain but more importantly to Cunningham it seems the stress of being around the suicides. For a book that may attract readers that have been suicidal (like myself), I found that section to be out of touch and full of privilege. Not to mention the sexist standard where the woman who committed suicide “leaves a young family behind” while the man’s family is barely mentioned. This book could be harmful to the sensitive population that is meant to help, and I wish I had read reviews before picking it up.

The art was cool though, and there was at least some minimal amount of science mentioned.
Profile Image for Lisa Vegan.
2,913 reviews1,316 followers
April 22, 2011
I picked up this book and I didn’t put it down until I’d finished it. Luckily, it’s a really quick read. I was able to fully appreciate the graphic form of these stories. I admire the author for trying to describe mental illnesses to potential readers who might not otherwise understand them. I think, given the brevity of the work, he does a reasonably good job accomplishing what he intended to do. It’s hard for me to determine if readers knowing nothing about mental illnesses will be even close to adequately educated if they read this book, but it would be a start.

I enjoyed these graphic stories., both the stories and the art. They’re an entertaining and somewhat effective way to describe and take the stigma away from various mental illnesses. The author-artist describes patients he met while training to become a mental health nurse. The account became emotionally powerful when, in the last section, he describes his own difficulties with depression and anxiety, and how he was able to cope and thrive despite these illnesses. Everything from dementia to anti-social personality disorder to schizophrenia to self-harm to bipolar disorder, to depression, etc. is covered.
Profile Image for Andrés Santiago.
99 reviews63 followers
September 14, 2011
One of the most beautiful comic/graphic novel I have ever read. It is informative, sensitively done and very personal. It stays with you long after you read it. I hope this guy keeps making comics, he is one to follow...
Profile Image for Raina.
1,718 reviews163 followers
July 25, 2012
I'm really glad this is shelved in nonfiction in my library system, because it totally is. Although the subtitle prepares you for short stories, they're really just short chapters discussing a different illness or illness-adjacent issue.

The art is really lovely, don't get me wrong. As Cunningham says in the last chapter, he's especially great with cityscapes.

Generally, though, this felt very didactic to me. The anecdotes or "stories" of Cunningham's experience generally take up less than half of each chapter, with statements teaching the reader about mental illness filling up the bulk of the book. Which would probably be helpful to a lot of people who haven't been exposed to many mental illness issues. But to me, it sometimes came off as a zine version of a "be sensitive to people who struggle with this" tract.

Maybe it's a geography thing. Maybe England is more supressed about these things than amerika. Personally, though I'm by no means an expert, I'm fascinated by the many ways our brains can be wired and have therefore sought out books, movies, and other media on this topic. I also have friends who are open about their struggles. So I feel like there was very little new information for me.

I appreciate the effort in this, the struggles Cunningham went through as he worked his way through it. I found his personal story (the last chapter) to be the most compelling part, and I wish that the book had had more of an overarching narrative, perhaps integrating his story with the informational bits, with more detail about each of the individual stories contained within.

I'd especially have liked to see Cunningham discuss how it felt to work in a facility while struggling with his own mental health. Was he diagnosed before? Or did interacting with the patients give him insights into his own conditions?

The art really is beautiful, though.
Profile Image for Gabriel Infierno.
294 reviews8 followers
November 12, 2018
I don't really know how to feel about this book, in one hand I appreciate that a person is interested in talk a very hard subject, in the other hand I feel that the book has a voyeuristic approach in people with mental illness and it's targeted to neurotypical public. But I don't find this approach helpful even that I know that cartoonize people who suffer of a mental illness can be a eye catcher for neurotypical and can help to go to the later message of demystifying the subject, besides that it has a very on point talk about people with schizophrenia not being dangerous people like media try to tell us ( and I think that now on day this is a very important message ), the book go on with a lot of unnecessary detail and data that can be triggering and I think very incorrect to share, like giving the how to suicide in an mental institution and how and were and how far people self-harm themselves, going on detail on how and were people with dementia poop or pee. I didn't like the chapter of people with mental illness can be creative and give something to society because, you know if they don't or they can't work, have a artistic production, or "give something to society" they are still people and deserve to have the better life quality they can have and also the suffering artist myth is not helpful or real or good to anybody.

I find that the book it's like "WELCOME TO THE FREAK SHOW, but they are people too" and I say this as a person with BPD, who is a daughter of a woman with schizophrenia and a sister of a person with schizophrenia personality disorder, I don't think this book is for neuroatypicals or put us in a nice place. And I know that you might find us "INTERESTING" but really we are not a show.
Profile Image for Elizabeth A.
2,151 reviews119 followers
December 21, 2022
I expected more from this graphic memoir. The author worked as a psychiatric and care nurse, and struggled personally with depression. This collection barely scratched the surface, and felt rather disjointed. If you are entirely new to the concept of mental health and surrounding stigma, this might work better for you.
Profile Image for Kate Stericker.
195 reviews11 followers
April 24, 2017
I was initially apprehensive about reading this book, since the cover and the blurb gave the impression that it might take a voyeuristic/sensationalistic tone and recount the stories of mentally ill people in a way that was intended to be unsettling. However, I found the author's narrative voice honest and understanding, and it's clear that his intention with this book is to debunk false beliefs about mental illness and humanize those affected by it. As someone experienced with mental illness and related literature, the book didn't contain a lot of new information for me, but I think it would be very valuable if more people were exposed to this kind of educational content with a personal slant.
Profile Image for Amber.
761 reviews173 followers
February 28, 2018
This is really simplistic and at times repetitive. I was hoping for more humor and insight. I either wanted there to be more personal stories, or more exploration of mental illness itself. Overall it was a bit bland and shallow, but I still read it all the way through because it's like...the ambient music of comic books. It was like going on a slow meandering walk through someone else's brain.

(Of course, as someone who worked at a pharmacy for eight years, none of these stories shocked me. But if you're not used to dealing with the mentally ill, you might not feel the same way about this comic.)
Profile Image for Molly.
3,271 reviews
April 25, 2011
A collection of short, graphic stories about working with the mentally ill. Really awful drawing style- even though he showed signs of potential with the chapter on famous people with mental illness, which makes it even worse. (I just hate that crude, blunt drawing style that seems to be popping up all over the place lately. Anyway.) The stories were all pretty unpleasant and didn't really open my eyes to any issues of mental health. I wouldn't really recommend this to anyone.
Profile Image for Sesana.
6,287 reviews329 followers
January 27, 2014
Not exactly what I'd been hoping for. I'd been hoping for some insightful looks at people with mental illness, but this isn't really that. Most of the chapters are really superficial. And I'm not a big fan of the art style. I suppose it's meant to read as simple, but it just looks simplistic, and amateurish.
Profile Image for Jennifer Siddiqui.
84 reviews106 followers
June 2, 2015
This book is based on the authors experience working in different psychiatric wards as a nursing assistant. I enjoyed learning about all the types of mental illness, but felt the book lacked depth regarding facts relating to all the different type of psychiatric disorders.
5 reviews
January 23, 2018
Braden Boudreau
Ms. O’Brien-Yetto
English 9H
1/23/18
            Review of Pyschiatric Tales by Darryl Cunningham
Pyschiatric Tales by Darryl Cunningham is a graphic novel of him telling stories about mental illness, he used to work as an assistant on a psychiatric ward for many years and is also a cartoonist so he made this book to take away the ignorance on mental illness and show how it can affect people.
    Onto the graphic novel itself, I thought it was a very well-done novel and I enjoyed it a lot, it covers a lot of serious topics but still makes it interesting with the way it is told and the cartoons added in which I believe are essential to the tales The first story, and one of my favorites is about dementia. It is a very serious disease and I feel for the faimly’s affected but it fascinates me on the science side of things. You have these completely normal people that over time completely forget who they are and what their life has been like. People imagining they are at sea or not remembering what a bathroom is. And in severe cases eating other humans feces like it was a Hershey’s chocolate bar.
    Another story that was rather sad was the one about self-harm labeled “Cut”. I don’t want to talk too much about it because it is really sad but it was nicely done by the author, saying “An act as serious as this reveals a deeply disturbed human being in need of help.Yet people who cut are often seen as timewasters by the very people employed to care for them.” This is a great quote and it really sheds light on the better care needed for these people. Some people see acts such as cutting yourself as a cry for attention but it is a serious thing. While regular people think this the people in charge simply cannot and it was a good job by the author to recognize this.
    The novely was structured nicely with its sequential stories and was always interesting to pick up and read if my internet wasn’t working or if I was just bored. I gave it 4 stars because it was a great book but a book/reading has to really engross me to get 5 stars. It definitely expanded my knowlegde on numerous diseases and I feel more prepared if I need to talk about them.
13 reviews
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November 7, 2017
I read Psychiatric Tales by Darryl Cunningham. In this book Cunningham talks about his experiences working in a psychiatric hospital. He shares information and experiences from the different types of wards that he worked in. I enjoyed this book because Cunningham uses it at a platform to educate the public about different types of mental illness and put to rest different myths and stereotypes that many people think of when they hear about a mental illness. For example, Cunningham explains that people schizophrenia are normally not dangerous, and that they themselves are more prone to being attacked because they don't fit in with society socially as the rest of us do.
As far a characters go Cunningham is really the only one who is there constantly throughout the book. He is sort of there in the experiences that are being recalled, but at the same time narrating. Cunningham is a likeable guy, and as a reader you feel bad for him at the end of the story. He talks about his own fight with mental illness and depression and how he viewed himself as worthless and not smart enough for the job that he wanted. The art in here is essentially black or white, no shading, but it is extremely detailed. Cunningham uses detail to show some of the horrors of the thing that happen inside of psychiatric wards, he even diagrams a brain at one point. I personally liked this book and thought that it taught an important lesson about mental illness. I would recommend it.
Profile Image for Emma Bowen.
79 reviews2 followers
July 3, 2023
I was disappointed in this graphic novel. Each disorder or illness was only a handful of pages and didn’t dive that deep into anything other than what the general public already knows. There were a few sections or points that were written well or nice to include but I was just wanting way more and had my hopes way up. Cunningham has some great background and material that he could have pulled from more but stuck to the surface for the “stories.” He prefaces the book by mentioning that each person has had personal details changed for their confidentiality… but this wasn’t even needed based on the overall general examples of people with whatever disorder is being written about. I think this book would have been better if there was a deeper dive into some of the stories rather than quick summaries. I didn’t feel a connection to any person, including the writer. I also think that the chapter including famous individuals should have been placed near the end, since it was about how mental illness affects more people than you think and is widespread. Super quick read but not needed.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
3 reviews
January 24, 2018
I read “Psychiatric Tales” by Darryl Cunningham. This was great. I usually don’t like to read books, but I didn’t want to put this book down. This book is about events that occured while the author was working in a hospital for mental illness.
I enjoyed how the format of the book was a graphic novel. This makes the book more entertaining and pleasing to the eye in my opinion. I feel like the points that Darryl Cunningham was trying to make in his book were better understood since there were pictures. I also like how the author of the book related to it at the end. Him relating to the book gave the book much more meaning. Next, I like how the author used characterization. Every person he talked about in his book he described, and he talked about what happened to them. An example of this is, “She was naturally very upset, there was one particular tragedy about this patient, as she was still young”. This quote shows how he describes the characters. In this quote alone he described a character as being upset and young. Him describing characters helped me get an understanding of each person in the book.
In conclusion, I enjoyed this book. I enjoyed this book because it was a graphic novel, the author related to the book, and the author used characterization so I knew about every person in the book.
Profile Image for Christelle.
204 reviews16 followers
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March 4, 2021
Ça a plus une allure de documentaire instructif sur différentes maladies mentales qu'une bédé-récit. Le ton de la narration est très explicatif, comme si on assistait à un cours 101 des causes, fonctionnements physiques et psychiques, et effets de la maladie. Des maladies. En images, des histoires courtes provenant de la vie de l'auteur durant son époque d'infirmier psychiatrique. Certaines sont bonnes. Ça aurait toutefois gagné à être davantage mis à l'avant -- miser plus sur la puissance des récits, des détresses et des espoirs. Or, au lieu d'être lourd de charge émotionnelle, ce titre est lourd de recours didactiques.

Mais s'il faut faire un présentoir sur "démystifier les maladies mentales", ce livre y sera, c'est promis.
Profile Image for Rich.
147 reviews31 followers
May 3, 2018
I loved this, although from the ratings here it seem like many people didn't. I think this novel does a great job of mitigating the stigma of mental illness and I thought it was particularly intimate, especially toward the end as Cunningham describes his own experiences with mental illness. I think this novel is a must-read if you're trying to humanize those who live with mental illness and those who work with those clients.
Profile Image for Santi.
79 reviews
January 17, 2023
found some solace in the last chapter where cunningham discusses his own mental health + feelings of isolation! it resonated with me as someone just starting out in a healthcare career w loads of anxiety

4 reviews
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January 9, 2019
The book psychiatric tales is about a guy who worked in a psychiatric ward and kept a diary throughout his time in working at the ward and once he had a lot of stories after working in the ward for a while the authors friends told him that he should write a cartoon about it. The story takes place in a psychiatric ward somewhere in England and the main character, Darryl Cunningham, is a health care assistant taking care of all these people. Each chapter is about either a different type of patient he had or a certain type of disease that had lots of stories, the author usually tells the reader about the disease or patients in detail about what the disease is or the patient he had. The stories are very gruesome and very deep. One of the first stories he tells is about a woman who was admitted to the hospital many times before for self inflicted injuries like cutting herself, he also finds out that she cut off her nipples and flushed them down the toilet. He then goes on to explain the causes and motives for self injury like he does in all the other chapters.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
8 reviews
March 6, 2020
I don't usually read graphic novels because I have never really gotten into them. This book sounded very interesting at first and I liked the concept of bringing awareness to mental health through a graphic novel. Many people struggle with their mental health and the people around them do not understand what they are going through or how to help them cope with their illnesses. I thought it was interesting that these stories came from a psychiatric nurse and the things he saw during his career. I was interested in reading this book because my sister is going to be a nurse and talked about her time in a psych ward and hearing her stories were so cool. I think you could use this book to bring awareness to mental health or if someone in your class is really in to graphic novels and has expressed interest in mental health awareness. I didn't love it, but I didn't hate it either. I thought the book would go into more detailed stories about mental illnesses, but it was just a brief overview of many different mental illnesses.
Profile Image for Michele.
446 reviews44 followers
December 14, 2025
3.5 stars

I found his panels about the people he encountered, humanizing an often dehumanized group of people, a really interesting - and sometimes shocking - read. He spends a lot of pages talking about what those mental illnesses actually are (ie. dementia, bipolar, depression) which was good to explain to readers what those really are but, given the synopsis, I was expecting more of the personal experiences which I found compelling. Overall an insightful, quick read. He ends the book with his own mental health journey.

Trigger warning: there are stories of seIf-harm and $uic!de.
Profile Image for Mia McBride.
44 reviews1 follower
April 29, 2025
2 STARS - also for my literature and medicine class; nothing special but did teach me more about how we as a society should view different mental illnesses. some of this felt insensitive and judgey soooo i can’t tell if the author did a good job with making us see that mental illnesses shouldn’t be looked down upon… but overall easy quick read (and my first graphic novel!)
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