There are medical dramas, and then there is The Pitt. There’s a reason this particular show had all of us glued to our screens. It wasn’t just the adrenaline rush of trauma cases or the relentless pace of a Pittsburgh emergency department – it was the people at the centre of it all.

The Max series dropped us into the middle of a 15-hour shift and somehow made every second count. And if, like me, you’ve found yourself missing the controlled chaos of the ER, these books are the perfect prescription. From brutally honest memoirs and inspiring real-life stories to fictional hospitals where the coffee is cold and the stakes are sky-high, here’s what to read next.
Code Gray by Farzon A. Nahvi

This book is an insider’s look at emergency medicine, where every shift can change in an instant. If the controlled chaos of The Pitt kept you on the edge of your seat, Code Gray will feel instantly familiar. ER physician Farzon A. Nahvi shares real-life stories from the emergency department that are as pulse-pounding as they are deeply human, revealing what happens long after the alarms stop ringing.
The Emergency by Thomas Fisher

A gripping account of life inside the emergency department, where every patient arrives with a story, and every doctor leaves carrying a few more, best describes The Emergency. Equal parts high-pressure and heartfelt, it’s a fitting companion to the emotional rollercoaster of the show.
Taking Care by Sarah DiGregorio

If there’s one thing The Pitt reminds us through brilliantly written characters like Dana, Perlah, Princess, and the rest of its nursing staff, it’s that hospitals don’t run on doctors alone. In this sweeping history of nursing, Sarah DiGregorio shines a spotlight on the profession that’s often overlooked but always indispensable. Compassionate, eye-opening, and deeply human, it’s a fitting tribute to the people who hold healthcare together, one patient at a time.
The Beauty in Breaking by Michele Harper

Emergency physician Michele Harper reflects on healing in all its forms – physical, emotional, and personal. Beautifully written and profoundly compassionate, this memoir reminds us that the people wearing scrubs are often carrying wounds of their own.
All That Moves Us by Jay Wellons

From life-saving brain surgeries to the impossible conversations that follow them, neurosurgeon Jay Wellons offers a rare glimpse into a world where every decision carries enormous weight. Honest, moving, and surprisingly funny, it’s impossible not to think of Dr Robby while reading it.
This Is Going to Hurt by Adam Kay

Sleep deprivation, impossible patients, bureaucratic nightmares, and humour dark enough to survive them all? Check! Adam Kay’s bestselling memoir is equal parts hilarious and heartbreaking. If The Pitt had you laughing through the chaos one minute and holding back tears the next, this belongs at the top of your reading list.
Black Jack by Osamu Tezuka

Before TV gave us doctors like Dr Robby, there was Black Jack. This legendary manga follows a brilliant, unlicensed surgeon tackling extraordinary cases while wrestling with impossible ethical dilemmas. Dramatic, philosophical, and endlessly entertaining, it’s a medical classic for a reason.
House of God by Samuel Shem

Ask almost any doctor for a book that captures the reality of medical training, and this title is bound to come up. Equal parts satire and survival guide, The House of God dives into the exhaustion, absurdity, and emotional toll of life inside a teaching hospital.