MK Czerwiec's tales of her nursing work on an AIDS unit chart a remarkable episode in the history of medicine. It's a time of staggering loss but also remarkable change. Through the lives and deaths of individual patients, written and drawn in documentary detail, we see the power dynamic between doctor and patient begin to shift. When cure is not an option, care takes on a new meaning.
-Alison Bechdel, author of Fun Home
Rather than the usual medical tales of professional-minded strangers treating faceless victims, Czerwiec's vignettes become about bonding intimately over suffering and death, watching the community be decimated at the same time as mutual nursing was building connections. Some of the pages are heart-wrenching, and the story has the potential to be supremely depressing, but Czerwiec wrings hope from the honesty of her simple, cheerful cartooning style.
-Publishers Weekly
With simple, even amateur panels and wise words, Czerwiec reveals a hospital at the heart of the AIDS crisis. Working as a nurse on a unit for AIDS patients, she and her colleagues helped patients die, celebrated life, and strove to combat the poorly understood disease. Cathartic and clinical, often simultaneously.
-Emilia Packard, Library Journal
[Czerwiec's] chronicle reminds us that the era was marked as much by courage and compassion as it was by the tragedy of lives lost too soon.
-Gordon Flagg, Booklist
With first-person perspectives, simple line-drawings, and straight-forward language, the reader is able to place themselves within this important time of medical history and absorb what occurred, and in this sense it does not only [prompt] the reader to empathise with HIV/AIDS patients but with the health professional narrator, making a contribution to 'the cultural role of graphic medicine as critique of the medical profession.' It is not likely that one will ever cry with such empathy over a medical scientific publication, but far more likely that one will be brought to tears over four panels on a page in Czerwiec's book.
-Adrian Bussone, The Comics Grid
The emotional honesty of the comic book is quintessential to the visceral experience of Taking Turns-funny, terrifying and heartbreaking. As much as it informs the reader about the devastation of HIV/AIDS, the book allows the reader to see the disease through the eyes of a person who is literally on the front lines.
-Gretchen Rachel Hammond, Windy City Times
For health care providers, the years that followed [the first official reporting of what would become the AIDS epidemic] were a time of tremendous loss, requiring a new type of caregiving in the face of a disease with no cure. MK Czerwiec, a nurse and the artist-in-residence at Northwestern University's Feinberg School of Medicine, captures this tragic time with great reverence and attention to detail.
-Jessica Bylander, Health Affairs
Taking Turns chronicles [Czerwiec's] experiences on the evening shift at Unit 371 with patients and other caregivers, often told through voices other than her own, some of the stories funny, some very touching, especially the stories about patients with whom she became close before they died.
-Hank Trout, AU Magazine: America's AIDS Magazine
Among the takeaways one has after reading MK Czerwiec's graphic novel Taking Turns is that even in the form of sequential art, the story of the early days of the HIV epidemic is a visceral and heart wrenching experience.
-Savas Abadsidis, Advocate / HIV Plus
The author's deft handling of the multiplicity of relationships involved in patient care is the strength of the book, and they are all represented throughout the narrative. Czerwiec does an excellent job of showing how Unit 371's commitment to care facilitated a depth of intimacy between provider and patient not often found in today's productivity-driven medical care.
-Dr. Devlyn McCreight, Graphic Medicine
Czerwiec's role as a writer and illustrator of graphic medicine texts as well as one of the primary theorists and advocates of the genre, means that this, her first single-author entry into the form she helped establish is, like its author, doing the work of defining and practicing this new and compelling literary and artistic form.
-Ajuan Mance, Women's Review of Books
Czerwiec . . . does much more than just provide younger readers with a history lesson. For example, she thoughtfully explores what it means to be a healthcare provider. Czerwiec also explores the role of boundaries between healthcare providers and their patients and the need for empathy. These topics, I believe, would resonate with and be useful to students interested in medical or allied health careers. Instructors can use the book as a way to begin these conversations.
-David R. Wessner, Journal of Microbiology & Biology Education
Taking Turns bears important witness to a specific moment in the history of HIV/AIDS through the testimony of caregivers, patients, and volunteers. MK Czerwiec's story also issues a gracious challenge: knowing that we all live in vulnerable bodies, knowing that we will all 'take turns' needing others and being needed, how can we make this one life we have meaningful? This luminous graphic novel models how we can start: through creativity, community, generosity, and vulnerability.
-Ann Fox, Davidson College
Taking Turns is an important work that takes the field of graphic medicine in new directions, both in terms of its object-the philosophy and practices of a clinical unit dedicated to the care of people with AIDS in a particular place and historical moment-and its approach-drawing on the comic artist's own experience as a nurse on the unit as well as her interviews with other practitioners and patients.
-Lisa Diedrich, author of Indirect Action: Schizophrenia, Epilepsy, AIDS, and the Course of Health Activism
Whatever role we play in the health care system, this moving memoir reminds us to look beyond our institutional affiliations and find our place in the wider human community.
-JAMA
Czerwiec's work here serves as a valuable reflection on and historical portrait of the AIDS hysteria of the eighties and nineties in America. Combining her memories of that era with her contemporary perspective shows, and makes it seem unbelievable, that a group of people suffered so greatly because of their outsider status as patients with a transmittable, incurable, deadly disease. Taking Turns shows us the cost.
-The Oral History Review
While graphic medicine is still emerging as a communication tool, this book embodies the true essence of graphic medicine and could serve as an exemplar for future publications of this kind.
-Janice Phillips, Doody's Review Service
All of the characters described in the memoir serve as a reminder of the need for love, compassion, acceptance, and human connectivity when providing care to some of society's most vulnerable and often ostracized patient populations.
-Doody's Review Service