- Published: 16 May 2024
- ISBN: 9781529927665
- Imprint: Vintage Digital
- Format: EBook
- Pages: 336
You Don't Have to Be Mad to Work Here
A Psychiatrist’s Life
- Published: 16 May 2024
- ISBN: 9781529927665
- Imprint: Vintage Digital
- Format: EBook
- Pages: 336
Laugh-out-loud funny and deeply moving in equal measure, his compassion for his patients shines through. Wonderfully written. I loved this book
Max Pemberton, author of Trust Me I'm a (Junior) Doctor
Funny, clear-eyed and unexpectedly moving
Sebastian Faulks, author of Birdsong
Very funny and deeply sympathetic. Really excellent
Henry Marsh, author of Do No Harm
This is honestly my dream book. Both fascinating and bleakly funny in the way only an embattled NHS psychiatrist's book could be
Fern Brady, author of Strong Female Character
An absolute beauty... Wise, warm, witty and an excellent insight
Dr Phil Hammond, author of Staying Alive
I loved it. Witty, poignant, thoughtful, and moving. It’s made me want to start psychiatry all over again
Professor Sir Simon Wessely, former President of The Royal College of Psychiatrists
A darkly comic personal trawl through the world of psychiatry and the idiosyncratic characters struggling on both sides of the divide. Honest, funny, saddening and uplifting all rolled into one
Jo Brand, comedian and former psychiatric nurse
A heartbreaking and also funny look at psychiatry. I loved this engrossing book which taught me lots of new things and broadened my mind
Cathy Rentzenbrink
Funny, humane and insightful
i news
Fascinating, heartbreaking and hilarious
Michael Odell, The Times
Hilarious, shocking and urgent… a deeply compassionate book, which paints a picture of professional dedication in the face of almost unbelievable dysfunction
The Times, *Book of the Week*
Humorous and humane … [Waterhouse] finds the funny without turning patients into punchlines... It’s a warm-hearted reminder that the [NHS] system is still staffed by many people doing their darnedest to connect with and care for people
Sunday Telegraph
It has a freshness and verve that sets it apart... What is unwavering and beautifully described is the inspiration Waterhouse continues to find in his patients. He has that essential trait of all good doctors: a sincere and lasting tenderness for his flawed and frail, crude and complicated, broken and brilliant fellow human beings… Ultimately, this is a campaigning work, both brilliantly funny and deadly serious…. His book is humane, hilarious, eye-opening – and deserves to be widely read
Rachel Clarke, Guardian
Funny but also touching and, at times, incredibly sad. A love letter to both psychiatry and the patients we care for, the author's humanity and devotion shine through.
Max Pemberton, Daily Mail
[A] superb memoir… a book that should really prompt a public inquiry but is also, somehow, hilarious… If this book does not serve as a wake-up call that serious change is needed, I don’t know what will
Evening Standard
Furious and very funny… If you want to read something that matters, try this
Sunday Times, *Summer Reads of 2024*
[A] compassionate, insightful and thought-provoking memoir
Daily Express
A topical read that sheds light and humour on a dark crisis
Mail on Sunday, *Summer Reads of 2024*
Waterhouse…manages to tread that delicate line of being both humane and hilarious
iNews, *Summer Reads of 2024*
[A] stark, funny, and humane account of working as a psychiatrist in the UK’s National Health Service… profoundly and ruthlessly honest
Lancet
Things certainly don’t always work out for Dr Benji Waterhouse in his darkly amusing and touching memoir You Don’t Have to Be Mad to Work Here, about his experiences as an NHS doctor specialising in psychiatry. It gives you an alarming insight into the chaotic lives of both patients and medical staff
Jacqueline Wilson
Darkly amusing and touching... It gives you an alarming insight into the chaotic lives of both patients and medical staff.
Jacqueline Wilson, *Waterstones Favourite Reads of 2024*
Treading a delicate line between the humane and the hilarious… An unforgettable joy
i, *Books of the Year*
The face of modern psychiatry
Dr Gwen Adshead, author of The Devil You Know
A really excellent piece of work
Richard Herring
Brings sanity to the mental health conversation and is also somehow very funny
Nihal Arthanayake