The Science and the People

Linda Soules Author Interview

So You Want To Be A Doctor is an illustrated guide that explores a career in medicine, showing not just the science and skills required, but also the compassion, teamwork, and emotional intelligence that make a great doctor. What kind of child did you imagine while writing this book?

The dedication says it: “For every kid who ever put a bandage on a stuffed animal and meant it.” That’s the child I had in mind — the one who senses, very early, that taking care of someone is a serious and somehow sacred thing, even when the patient is a teddy bear.
But I also wrote it for the child who asks, “But why does that happen?” about their own body and wants a real answer, not a brush-off. The child who is affected when someone is hurting. The child who already understands, without anyone having to teach them, that paying close attention to another person matters.

And I wrote it for the child who is curious about both halves of medicine — the science and the people — because both are essential, and a book that honored only one would miss what makes medicine extraordinary.

The doctor-as-detective analogy is one of the book’s most effective framings. How did you develop that comparison, and what does it unlock for young readers that a more straightforward science explanation wouldn’t?

The book opens with the analogy: being a doctor is about being the world’s greatest detective. Every patient who walks through the door is a mystery — something hurts, something changed, something doesn’t feel right — and the doctor’s job is to ask the right questions, gather the clues, and figure out what is happening inside a body that cannot just tell you what is wrong.

The framing first occurred to me while I was writing So You Want To Be A Veterinarian, where the patients literally cannot speak. But I quickly realized the comparison fits every medical field. Medicine, at its core, is the work of pulling scattered data into a coherent picture of what is actually happening to a person — and that picture is rarely as straightforward as it looks at first glance.

The framing does three things at once that a straight science explanation cannot.

First, it puts the child in the active seat. A textbook hands you facts. A detective story invites you to think. The moment a young reader recognizes that doctors are working a case — asking, examining, reasoning until the most likely answer emerges — they stop being a passive learner and start being a participant.

Second, it captures something true that pure science framing misses: even though most patients can speak, the body itself speaks only in symptoms, not sentences. Decoding that requires curiosity, patience, and the discipline to keep asking questions when it may be tempting to settle for the obvious answer.

Third, it makes uncertainty honest. Detectives follow wrong leads. They hold open questions. They keep going when the answer doesn’t come quickly. Any real doctor will tell you that holding uncertainty while still acting carefully is one of the most important skills in medicine — and detective stories teach children that this is a virtue, not a weakness.

The book balances science with storytelling really well. How did you decide which medical concepts were most important to introduce for readers ages 10 to 14?

My goal was to select concepts interesting enough to spark genuine curiosity and understanding, but never so much that wonder turns into homework.

My filter came down to three questions. Does this concept make a child see the world more clearly the next time they walk into a doctor’s office — what a stethoscope actually does, what an MRI is really photographing, what a prescription represents? Does it teach a habit of mind that will serve them regardless of whether they choose to become a doctor — probabilistic thinking, intellectual humility, the paradox that pattern recognition is powerful and dangerous in equal measure? And does it carry a story worth telling — like the 1816 French doctor who rolled up a piece of paper because pressing his ear against a young woman’s chest would have been improper, inventing the stethoscope by accident?

I wanted concepts that arrive with their humanity attached. Probability sounds dry until you put it in a doctor’s voice: “There’s a 70% chance it’s this, 20% chance it’s that, and a 10% chance it’s something we haven’t thought of yet.” Suddenly, a child sees how doctors actually reason — and starts reasoning that way too.

What I left out was anything that required a textbook chapter of scaffolding to land. I’d rather plant one concept that takes root than throw five over the fence.

One of the most memorable ideas in the book is that listening carefully and making patients feel heard is part of “medicine at its fullest.” Why do you think empathy is such an essential skill for doctors?

Because medicine without empathy is technically competent and humanly incomplete — and patients always know the difference.

The book has a line I genuinely believe: “the science tells you what is wrong; the heart tells you how to help.” A diagnosis isn’t a piece of paper. It’s news delivered to a frightened person about the only body they will ever have. How that news is delivered and received is itself a clinical outcome. A patient who feels heard is a patient who tells you the symptom they were too embarrassed to mention — the one that may turn out to be the key to everything. A patient who feels rushed or unseen is the one who walks out with the right prescription and never fills it.

I’ve heard from multiple practitioners that listening to the patient is the most important lesson they’ve learned, that the patient is telling you the diagnosis. Most diagnoses begin in the medical interview, not the lab — and the doctor who can put a nervous patient at ease, who hears what is said and what is carefully not said, is gathering information no blood test can provide.

And there is something deeper still. The Hippocratic Oath is 2,400 years old, and the deepest part of its promise isn’t “I will save you” or “I will know everything.” It’s simpler than that. It is: I will not abandon you. Empathy is what makes that promise real. It is the part of medicine that doesn’t require a degree, but without which no degree is enough.

Author Links: GoodReads | Website | Amazon

What if the person who saves someone’s life twenty years from now is sitting in a classroom right now, wondering what it actually takes to become a doctor?

So You Want To Be A Doctor is an illustrated nonfiction guide for kids ages 10 to 14 who feel the pull toward medicine and want real answers — not fairy tales. Linda Soules takes young readers inside the profession from the ground up: the years of study, the science of the human body, the emotional weight of holding someone’s health in your hands, and the deep reward that keeps doctors coming back to it, year after year.

Kids will learn how the body’s systems work together — how bones heal, how the brain sends signals through the nervous system, how doctors read symptoms the way a detective reads clues. The human body is staggeringly complex, and this book doesn’t shy away from that complexity. Instead, it makes the science vivid, accessible, and genuinely fun to dig into.
Beyond the biology, readers will explore what a medical career actually looks like day to day. What happens during hospital rounds? How do surgeons prepare for an operation? What does a pediatrician do differently than an emergency room doctor or a medical researcher? This guide covers the full range of paths within medicine so kids can begin to imagine where they might fit.

There’s also an honest look at the journey itself. Medical school, residency, the sacrifices, the sleepless nights — and the moments that make all of it worth it. Children who dream about healthcare careers deserve to know what the road really looks like, and this book gives them that clarity without talking down to them.

Every chapter is built on specifics. Real science. Real scenarios. Real insight into how doctors think, decide, and care for their patients. The illustrations make even the most complex medical concepts feel approachable, turning each page into something readers will want to explore rather than skip.

This is the book for the kid who asks questions that don’t have simple answers. The one who wants to understand not just how the body works, but what it means to dedicate your life to keeping it healthy. Medicine has always needed people with that kind of curiosity and heart.

A richly illustrated guide for science-loving kids ages 10 to 14 who are ready to discover whether a life in medicine might be their path.

Posted on June 1, 2026, in Interviews and tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , . Bookmark the permalink. Leave a comment.

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