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Loading... Neurocomicby Hana Ros, Matteo Farinella (Illustrator)
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. Neurocomic is a great book and comic. Its important to show diversity it the types of books students have the option and access to read. Many students are drawn to comic for the illsutriation and very visual aspect. Combining science and comics is a great way for students to gain a deeper and clearer understanding of concepts introduced to them. Neurocomic follows a journey through the human brains. Represented with neuron forests, memory caves and castles of deception, this book is a funny and creative way to introduce and explore the human brain. This book is a perfect book to have for students to gain deeper understanding and also help students who might want to follow the STEM or medicial path find certain topics that intrigue them I was at the library where I was innocently seduced by this shiny foil cover. Then I picked it up when I was feeling stuck on another book. I am sorry to say that I was not particularly impressed. It was written by two neuroscientists, so I am sure that the information was good, but the framing story was so tired and heteronormative, and EVERY authority was an old white/European man (I know that the authorities were based on the actual scientists who made the discoveries, but you couldn't find ONE woman or BIPOC or visibly disabled person who made a contribution?) But there was a topless mermaid and a boobs-and-butt posing neurotransmitter in skin-tight clothes and OH WAIT, THE ENTIRE PLOT IS DRIVEN BY NAMELESS DUDE'S QUEST TO FIND NAMELESS GIRL HE BRIEFLY SAW IN A PARK, SO I GUESS CHICKS ARE IMPORTANT! Maybe I'm being overly harsh. I'm just TIRED. no reviews | add a review
Nonfiction graphic novel explaining the physiology of the brain and describing theoretical and experimental developments that led to our present understanding. No library descriptions found. |
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)612.820222Technology Medicine & health Human physiology Nervous system Central nervous system Nervous Centers; BrainLC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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An illustrated journey into the study of brain and what we know about it, from the bird's eye view of a scientist. The book is not exhaustive; it includes a psychedelic mix of characters and symbols that may only convey to people that work in the field; the drawings are black and white with strong lines that some might find stark; the words and dialogue are essential. But what matters is that the creative work offers depth and a thread to the beginning of the story of how our brain works in a format I have not found anywhere, and does so with mastery and love. ( )