Wellcome Collection books explore health and human experience. From birth and beginnings to illness and loss, our titles grapple with life’s big questions through compelling writing and beautiful design. In partnership with leading independent publisher Profile Books, we champion essential voices and fresh perspectives across history, memoir, psychology, medicine, and science.

Wellcome Collection is a free museum that aims to challenge how we all think and feel about health by connecting science, medicine, life and art. It is part of Wellcome, a global charitable foundation that supports science to solve urgent health challenges, working in more than 70 countries, with a focus on mental health, global heating and infectious diseases.

The Unfragile Mind

Gavin Francis

A deeply human and compassionate re-evaluation of mental illness from the GP and bestselling author of Adventures in Human Being

To Exist As I Am

Grace Spence Green

A young doctor's extraordinary story of near-death, recovery and radical acceptance

No Ordinary Deaths

Molly Conisbee

A vibrant, compelling social history of death, dying, and how our ends shape our lives and societies

Immaculate Forms

Helen King

Journey into the complex medical and religious history of women's bodies from classical Greece to the modern day

Nine Minds

Daniel Tammet

A celebration of neurodiversity – meet nine extraordinary people on the autism spectrum

Rumbles

Elsa Richardson

The secret history of the body's most fascinating organ: the gut

Disobedient Bodies

Emma Dabiri

An act of rebellion and a reclamation of beauty

Free For All

Gavin Francis

An urgent call-to-arms in defence of our NHS

How to be a Renaissance Woman

Jill Burke

Beauty, make up, power: plunge into the intimate history of cosmetics

The Story of the Brain in 10½ Cells

Richard Wingate

Peer into a microscopic world – and fall in love with the beauty of the brain

Divided

Annabel Sowemimo

A vital, eye-opening exploration of race and health

Eve

Claire Horn

The radical future of birth is here – but are we ready for it?