All sorts of bodies, all sorts of people.
Baptiste Beaulieu was a general practitioner, and so is the hero of his story, nicknamed Papou. A retiree who decides one fine morning to tell his grandson why people are beautiful. For their human imperfections always hide stories of life lived. When you're a doctor, you see all sorts of people, all sorts of bodies on a daily basis. People with years under their belt, stories, shapes, scars... So Papou finds it vital to repeat: society has no right to dictate anatomy. There is no ideal version of a human body.