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352 pages, Paperback
First published January 1, 2015
BOTW
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b05xd44c
1/5: Gavin begins with the moment, age 19, when he first held a human brain.
2/5: Francis has dissected many human faces during medical training, and as a demonstrator of anatomy, but he has never lost the sense of privilege that doing so brings. Our faces are key to our human identity - when faces are available, we pay more attention to them than to any part of the visual world. When our ability to use our facial muscles to convey our emotions is harmed, as in Bell's palsy, it can be socially devastating. But even when a face is damaged, it's still vital to our sense of self.
3/5: A serious motorbike crash brings a young soldier to A&E with a badly injured shoulder. His arm is paralysed, and may not recover.
4/5: The liver is a mysterious organ - essential to life, multifarious in its actions, its tissue unusual in being able to regenerate.
5/5: His journey ends at the foot - a marvel of engineering often overlooked by anatomists and medical students.