Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Doctor Dolittle books (15 P) H. Novels set in hospitals (1 C, 35 P) N. ... Pages in category "Medical novels" The following 54 pages are in this category, out of 54 ...
The 1900s by and large saw the rise of the "doctor novel" as a literary subgenre, which itself is a subset of, or otherwise synonymous with, medical fiction. [14] A 2009 book, Doctors in Fiction: Lessons from Literature, discusses medical practitioners ranging from the late 12th century to the early 21st, including small analyzes of their ...
Medical fiction writers (13 P) A. Fiction about abortion (4 C, 22 P) B. Fiction about burn survivors (1 C, 33 P) D. ... Pages in category "Fiction about medicine and ...
Robert Brian "Robin" Cook (born May 4, 1940) [2] is an American physician and novelist who writes largely about medicine and topics affecting public health.. He is known best for combining medical writing with the thriller genre.
Writers of medical fiction: Fiction whose events center upon a hospital, an ambulance staff, or any medical environment. Pages in category "Medical fiction writers" The following 13 pages are in this category, out of 13 total.
Fiction about human subject research, systematic, scientific investigation that can be either interventional (a "trial") or observational (no "test article") and involves human beings as research subjects, commonly known as test subjects. Human subject research can be either medical (clinical) research or non-medical (e.g., social science ...
Cutting for Stone (2009) is a novel written by Ethiopian-born Indian-American medical doctor and author Abraham Verghese.It is a saga of twin brothers, orphaned by their mother's death at their births and forsaken by their father. [1]
Round the Red Lamp: Being Facts and Fancies of Medical Life is a collection of medical and detective stories by Arthur Conan Doyle published on 23 October 1894. The genres of the stories range from sentimental realism to graphic horror. The series was suggested to the author by Jerome K. Jerome then editor of The Idler. [1]