My Degeneration, 9780271071022
Paperback
A narrative of the author’s battle with Parkinson’s disease. Traces the author’s journey through depression, the disease symptoms, the medication and its side effects, the author’s interactions with family, and the mental and physical changes caused by the disease.

My Degeneration

a journey through parkinson’s

$73.56

  • Paperback

    108 pages

  • Release Date

    14 October 2015

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Summary

How does one deal with a diagnosis of Parkinson’s disease at the age of forty-three? My Degeneration, by former Anchorage Daily News staff cartoonist Peter Dunlap-Shohl, answers the question with humor and passion, recounting the author’s attempt to come to grips with the “malicious whimsy” of this chronic, progressive, and disabling disease. This graphic novel tracks Dunlap-Shohl’s journey through depression, the worsening symptoms of the disease, the juggling of medications and their sid…

Book Details

ISBN-13:9780271071022
ISBN-10:0271071028
Author:Peter Dunlap-Shohl
Publisher:Pennsylvania State University Press
Imprint:Pennsylvania State University Press
Format:Paperback
Number of Pages:108
Release Date:14 October 2015
Weight:340g
Dimensions:216mm x 171mm x 8mm
Series:Graphic Medicine
What They're Saying

Critics Review

“[An] emotionally resonant memoir.”

—Publishers Weekly

“Peter Dunlap-Shohl’s My Degeneration is … a model of how to fill a particular niche… . In one of the funniest segments, Dunlap-Shohl presents a series of drawings of bad doctors: ‘the gimlet-eyed skeptic’ who accuses her patient of making up his symptoms, the ‘cheery prophet’ who forecasts inevitable physical decline, ‘the blithe know-it-all,’ and several more. For patients, these irreverent archetypes validate their experiences. Clinicians, too, stand to gain a better appreciation of how they might appear to their patients.”

—Arthur W. Frank Science

“My Degeneration opens up a powerful new purpose for comics—as an effective tool to educate doctors, patients, and others about both the clinical and the personal sides of living with a disease. This book should be required reading for any specialist.”

—Foreword Reviews

“Going beyond patient-education booklets, Dunlap-Shohl’s journey of setbacks and triumphs contextualizes key disease information within a narrative suffused with emotion and wry humor. [Parkinson’s disease] patients, families, and caregivers will find it valuable; those who enjoy memoirs will appreciate its compelling real-life drama.”

—Library Journal

“[My Degeneration] is in many ways what I would describe as the very model of a graphic medicine book: perfectly balancing … the educational and the autobiographical, the clinical and the personal.”

—Jared Gardner Public Books

“We learn basic facts and so much more from Dunlap-Shohl’s honest and honestly engaging account, from his initial depression through all of his learning and experience with the disease to his final chapter. Most of us likely know at least one person with Parkinson’s, and to now have this incredibly informative text allows us to understand the disease in a fresh, bold, visual and visceral way. Those who may find themselves with the unfortunate diagnosis will have a helpful guide to understanding and coping.”

—Nancy Lord Alaska Dispatch News

“The reach of this book extends far beyond those who have, or know someone who has, Parkinson’s disease. I recommend it especially to physicians and other health care providers, who by reading it might avoid the “gratuitous cruelty” that is so easily inflicted, and which Dunlap-Shohl illustrates from his own experiences… . I recommend it also to all readers as a story told with humor, honesty and grace, and Dunlap-Shohl has made it into a work of art.”

—Carolyn Kroehler The Roanoke Times

“Peter Dunlap-Shohl once again brings his unique art to the table to help educate, illustrate, and demonstrate life, hope, and strength on his journey with Parkinson’s. Creative and insightful, this book reflects all of Pete’s greatest qualities, including his constant work to help and educate all those in the PD community, patients and care partners alike.”

—Bill Bell, co-founder of the Northwest Parkinson’s Foundation

“Peter Dunlap-Shohl is a comic genius and a masterful artist. The fact that he came down with early-onset Parkinson’s gave him the unlucky opportunity to chronicle this dogged and humorless disease. His wit and artistry, his truth telling in the face of struggle, makes the struggle easier for his readers to bear. Peter is a Rock Star Artist and Humorist. Every disease like Parkinson’s should have someone like Peter Dunlap-Shohl, until there are no more diseases like Parkinson’s left.”

—John Straley, author of Cold Storage, Alaska

“I could have recommended Peter Dunlap-Shohl’s book because it brings attention to a great purpose. Or because it is brave and honest work. Or even simply to acknowledge an achievement of this magnitude created under physical, psychological, and emotional circumstances that most of us will never understand.

“But I’m not endorsing Peter’s graphic novel for any of those reasons. I’m doing so because this is a damn fine work of art, by a damn fine artist.”

—Nick Galifianakis, Washington Post cartoonist

“The world made fresh by a Parkinson’s patient with a wonderfully sensitive and cocked eye. He tells the tale of his fast-changing reality with compassion and wicked humor, leaping from one crazily inventive work of art to the next. Never more acute than when examining his own mind-set, Peter Dunlap-Shohl leads us from diagnosis and despair to the high ground where he could compose this lucid, moving book. A miracle, in a way—and a triumph.”

—Tom Kizzia, author of Pilgrim’s Wilderness: A True Story of Faith and Madness on the Alaska Frontier

“Terrific, a read-in-one-sitting book that engages, teaches, and challenges readers from the first page until its conclusion… . Ultimately, this is a story about resilience, and how PD helped the author develop a new perspective on the fragility of life and his ability to adapt to adversity. It is a lesson that all health care professionals should heed.”

—Michael J. Green and MK Czerwiec JAMA

“This unique memoir is a must-read for those facing a diagnosis of Parkinson’s disease. Caregivers and others interested in this disease also will glean valuable insights into what it is like for someone living with this diagnosis. The use of comics is an engaging way to impart useful information about the difficult topic of living with a chronic disease and, perhaps, ways of savoring any joy along the journey.”

—Janice Phillips Doody’s Review Service

About The Author

Peter Dunlap-Shohl

Peter Dunlap-Shohl worked as a cartoonist for the Anchorage Daily News for twenty-five years. He has won various prizes, including the First Amendment Award from the Alaska Press Club. His blogs are Frozen Grin and Off & On, the Alaska PD Rag, about living with Parkinson’s disease.

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