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Gary Brown, MD

The Author and the Stories

gary brown headshot in suit and tie

Dr. Gary Brown spent most of his professional life as a retinal surgeon and medical researcher, working with patients whose vision—and often their lives—depended on the outcome of delicate medical decisions.

His fiction takes readers from research laboratories and hospital wards into the shadowed territory where medicine, morality, and justice intersect.

In his medical thriller series, the protagonists—Dr. Kyle McCann and Dr. Graham Kurland—are accomplished physicians who entered medicine to heal and save lives. Both carry scars from trauma and tragedy. Yet they find themselves confronting the darkest forms of human cruelty, situations the legal system does not always resolve. Where, then, is accountability?

Drawing on decades of clinical practice and scientific research, Brown writes fiction grounded in real medicine while exploring how physicians respond when violence intrudes into their work and the law falls short.

“Doctors see the worst in people every day—trauma, violence, tragedy—and we know some people cause terrible harm. But we also see extraordinary resilience. After decades restoring sight, what I want people to see is the nobility of goodness in human beings.”

Gary Brown

Read a featured Q&A with Gary Brown

Professional Background

Gary Brown Headshot in blazser

Before turning to fiction, Dr. Brown built a distinguished career in ophthalmology and retinal surgery. He is a Phi Beta Kappa graduate of Colgate University and Alpha Omega Alpha at SUNY Upstate Medical University, where he played trumpet in jazz band. Dr. Brown completed his residency and vitreoretinal fellowship at Wills Eye Hospital—one of the world’s leading centers for eye care. He later served as Director of the Retina Service there, helping train generations of retinal specialists.

Over the course of his career, Dr. Brown performed tens of thousands of delicate retinal operations and helped lead one of the most influential retina fellowship programs in the world. Physicians trained through the program now practice throughout the United States, Canada, and within the U.S. Armed Forces.

His scholarly contributions have shaped the field internationally. Dr. Brown has authored or co-authored more than 600 scientific papers and medical writings, contributed to numerous medical textbooks, and delivered hundreds of lectures around the world. He was named to Castle Connolly’s Best Doctors in America for twenty consecutive years and received the Life Achievement Honor Award from the American Academy of Ophthalmology. He is also an original charter member of the Retina Hall of Fame.

Among his most influential contributions is the development of Value-Based Medicine, a framework for evaluating healthcare by how much it improves both the length and quality of patients’ lives.

Writing, Hope, and the Long Road Here

Melissa and Gary Brown on their boat

Gary Brown began writing long before he became a published novelist. During his medical training he often woke before dawn to work on stories before heading into the hospital. Medicine eventually took center stage, but the desire to write never disappeared.

Life later gave him a deeper understanding of the themes that would shape his fiction. In his later thirties, Dr. Brown developed polycystic kidney disease, which eventually led to kidney failure. A kidney transplant from his sister saved his life, but complications soon followed. He was completely paralyzed for nearly a year. At one point, doctors were uncertain whether he would walk again, let alone return to surgery.

He eventually did both.

Experiences like that inevitably change how a physician sees illness and suffering. Over the years, Dr. Brown and his wife Melissa—also a physician—studied the role hope plays in patients’ lives. Their research found that when patients leave a medical visit with even a small sense of hope, their quality of life can improve in measurable ways.

Writing became another way to pursue that idea. His novels draw on decades of medical experience, and the realities physicians witness every day, but they are written with a simple intention—to tell compelling stories that entertain readers while exploring resilience, justice, and the human capacity to endure difficult circumstances.

“Hope is powerful. It doesn’t mean ignoring reality. It means believing there is still a path forward.”

Gary Brown

At a Glance

  • Retinal surgeon, medical researcher, and novelist
  • Former Director of the Retina Service at Wills Eye Hospital
  • Author or co-author of more than 600 scientific publications and medical writings
  • Named to Castle Connolly’s Best Doctors in America for twenty consecutive years
  • Recipient of the Life Achievement Honor Award from the American Academy of Ophthalmology
  • Developer of the healthcare framework known as Value-Based Medicine
  • Debut novelist in his seventies with Invisible Justice
  • Creator of the Kyle McCann and Graham Kurland thriller series

Fast Facts

Hometown
Mineola, New York

Education
Phi Beta Kappa — Colgate University
MD — SUNY Upstate Medical University

Medical Training
Residency and Vitreoretinal Fellowship — Wills Eye Hospital

Author Debut
Invisible Justice (Level Best Publishing, Spring 2026)

Forthcoming in the Dr. Kyle McCann & Dr. Graham Kurland series
An Eye for Justice
Fountain of Youth

Gary's Essay in Crimereads

DR. GARY BROWN ON THE PITT, TRAUMA, AND DEBUTING A MEDICAL THRILLER AT 76

THE AUTHOR OF INVISIBLE JUSTICE REFLECTS ON ALL-TOO-REAL VIOLENCE IN HEALTHCARE, HIS DREAM OF BEING A FICTION WRITER, AND HOW HIS EXPERIENCES IN THE ER INFORMED HIS FICTION.

Read it here

Advance Praise for Invisible Justice

“Gary, I found your book wonderful . . . I just kept turning the pages. I couldn’t stop. I wanted to know what happened next?. . .What happened next?. . . What happened next?. . . It unfolds in a really good way.

“I like that being a doctor, you have access to that kind of information. And your protagonist is a woman. She ends up joining this thing called the Tribunal, which is kind of like a Dexter on Steroids – as she gets the bad guys.”

— Jack Canfield,
Author of Success Principles
Co-Author, Chicken Soup for the Soul series,
with over 600 million books sold

“Dr. Gary Brown has created a rip-roaring Dexter with Doctors thriller, using his deep-dive knowledge of medical catastrophes, hard-earned as they were by one of America's unmatched eye surgeons, from slicing into eyeballs for decades. This is the kind of book you keep thinking about as you go through.”

— David Henry Sterry, Best-Selling Author of “Chicken”

“Gary Brown blends his considerable medical acumen with gripping storytelling ability to take the medical thriller to new heights.”

— Dr. Timothy Olsen, Professor, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN, Ophthalmology

Jack Canfield interviews Gary Brown on his novels

Feature: A Conversation with Gary Brown, MD

Tell us about the Kyle McCann and Graham Kurland thriller series and what inspired you to write it.

The idea began years ago when a pathologist colleague told me a shocking fact: fewer than half of murders are ever solved. This really got me thinking about justice and medicine.

Of course I wanted my stories to feature doctors. It’s the world I know, but also, physicians are on the front lines of human suffering. They see the aftermath of violence, illness, and misfortune. Doctors do everything they can to heal the damage, but sometimes justice never comes.

So, I created Kyle McCann and Dr. Graham Kurland. Kyle is a brilliant infectious disease specialist—a strong female lead. Graham, her love interest, is a transplant surgeon and former Army Ranger. They both suffer PTSD.

Together they are drawn to dangerous situations, and, in the process, confront the darker side of human nature.

You are a debut author at age 76. When and why did you start writing novels?

I loved writing ever since I was a child. During my first year of ophthalmology residency, I’d get up around four or five in the morning and write before going into the hospital.

In medicine we often say that doctors do two things—we help people live longer, or we help them live better. I came to believe that stories can help people live better. A great story can take us away from our pain and also entertain us. That idea stayed with me through my career.

It has taken most of my life to bring these novels into the world. I’m 76 now, and it’s very satisfying to finally see them published.

Why did you originally choose medicine?

When I was a child, I watched my grandmother lose her vision. After my grandfather died, she had managed well on her own, but once she went blind everything changed. She ended up in a nursing home and became very depressed.

That had a major impact on me. I saw how meaningful it would be to help people preserve their sight. That eventually led me into ophthalmology and retinal surgery.

You’ve also been seriously ill yourself. Did that change how you see patients—and the characters you write?

Very much.

I didn't know I had polycystic kindney disease until my mid thirties. It presented itself with serious complications and eventually my kidneys failed. I was frequently in the hospital. My sister donated a kidney that saved my life. Not long after the transplant I developed Guillain-Barré syndrome and became completely paralyzed for nearly a year.

When you go through something like that, you understand patients in a completely different way. I was fortunate and returned to surgery, but the experience gave me a deeper compassion into what my patients endure and affirmed my belief in the power of hope during difficult times.

Why write medical thrillers instead of memoir or nonfiction?

My imagination naturally goes toward fiction. I want to entertain people but also explore questions about medicine and human behavior.

I also noticed that novels often get medical details absurdly wrong. I always loved science and knew I could do better. When readers encounter medical events in my books, they can be sure the science is real.

Tell us more about your lead characters, Doctors Kyle McCann and Graham Kurland.

Dr. Kyle McCann, the female lead, is brilliant, determined, and able to deal with situations that would overwhelm most people.

Kyle and Graham together reflect many things I saw in medicine—the trauma doctors witness and the emotional weight physicians often carry.

At the same time, they represent something admirable. They are imperfect but fundamentally exceptional people who can inspire us because they are driven by a desire to do what is right, even at a cost to themselves.

You often talk about hope. Why is that so important to you?

My wife Melissa and I studied hope in patients and found something interesting. When people leave a medical visit with even a small sense of hope, their quality of life improves.

Hope is powerful. It doesn’t mean ignoring reality. It means believing there is still a path forward. I saw that again and again in patients facing serious illness.

How does it feel to publish your first novels in your seventies?

It feels very good.

After everything I’ve been through medically, I’m grateful to have the chance to do it. There were long stretches when my health made writing difficult. Medicine and life got in the way, but I always came back to it. Resilience has been a big part of my life. In some ways these books are another expression of that.

Start Reading Invisible Justice

Two doctors swore to do no harm.
But what if justice demands it?

cover of Invisible Justice by Gary Brown - a doctor in a hoodie

This sample includes the first two chapters:

  • Kyle in the ER, facing the kind of trauma that will shape everything that follows
  • Graham, whose past and training have prepared him for conflict—but not what’s coming next

Their paths haven’t fully crossed yet. But they will.

Download the first two chapters NOW.

EBOOK or PDF

If you want to continue beyond these chapters, buy Invisible Justice at:

Bookshop.org
(supports independent bookstores)

Available in paperback and ebook