OLIVER SACKS is a professor of neurology and psychiatry at Columbia University Medical Center and the author of many books, including Musicophilia, The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat, and Awakenings (which inspired the Oscar-nominated film).
"Although the descriptions of hallucinations are interesting in their own right, what gives real substance to the book on two levels are Sacks's explanations of the causes of various hallucinatory phenomena and his notes on the history of the science, the scientists, and the physicians who have sought to explain these phenomena. Overall, Sacks does a commendable job of explaining the workings of the brain in an accessible manner....That said, even the most erudite of readers is likely to learn something new." -American Psychological Association
"Absorbing...Dr. Sacks provides what he calls a kind of 'natural
history or anthology of hallucinations' drawn from his patients'
experiences, his own observations and from literature on the
subject...Sacks conjures these apparitions in language that has an
easy, tactile magic. As he's done in so many of his earlier books,
like The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat and An
Anthropologist on Mars, he uses his medical knowledge to
illuminate the complexities of the human brain and the mysteries of
the human mind. At the same time, his compassion for his patients
and his own philosophical outlook turn what might have been
clinical case studies into humanely written short stories, animated
as much by an intuitive appreciation of the human condition as by
scientific understanding." -Michiko Kakutani, The New York
Times "Effective--largely because Sacks never turns
exploitative, instead sketching out each illness with compassion
and thoughtful prose. A riveting look inside the human brain and
its quirks." -Kirkus "Fascinating...Writing with his trademark mix
of evocative description, probing curiosity, and warm empathy,
Sacks once again draws back the curtain on the mind's improbable
workings." -Publishers Weekly "Sacks' best-selling
nonfiction stories based on his practice of clinical neurology
constitute one shining reason for thinking that we're living in a
golden age of medical writing...Sacks defines the best of medical
writing." -Booklist "Another gem of a book...With a fine
sense of narrative, Sacks deftly integrates literature, art, and
medical history around his very human, often riveting, case
histories. This book is recommended for all readers, not just those
with symptoms! This is a model of humane science made compellingly
readable." -Library Journal, starred review "This doctor
cares deeply about his patients' experiences--about their lives,
not just about their diseases. Through his accounts we can imagine
what it is like to find that our perceptions don't hook on to
reality--that our brains are constructing a world that nobody else
can see, hear or touch...Sacks has turned hallucinations from
something bizarre and frightening into something that seems part of
what it means to be a person. His book, too, is a medical and human
triumph." -Washington Post "Wondrous." -Elle
"Sacks' science writing is always revelatory, and there are moments
in Hallucinations when seeing things can feel downright
life-affirming." -Time "Mesmerizing." -David Wallace-Wells,
New York Magazine "Oliver Sacks is my hero, so any book he
publishes is a book of the year for me...His book explores not only
his own experiences but a wide variety of conditions that can cause
patients to see things that aren't there, and his writing is
characterized by a mix of close-focus scientific scrutiny and broad
human sympathy." -Hilary Mantel, Wall Street Journal
Favorites of 2012 "Fascinating...Dr. Sacks's compassion for his
patients and philosophical outlook transform what might have been
clinical case studies into humanely written short stories that
illuminate the complexities of the human brain and the mysteries of
the human mind." -Michiko Kakutani, New York Times Top Ten
of the Year "A thoughtful and compassionate look at the phantoms
our brains can produce." -NPR "A brisk but characteristically
absorbing survey of the many ways human beings perceive things that
are not there...[Sacks] conveys, as ever, an expansive enthusiasm
for the brain itself, for its complexity and resilience and for the
myriad ways that the individual owners of remarkable brains have
learned to understand, cope with, and even relish their own neural
eccentricities." -Laura Miller, Salon "Should be required
reading for anyone in a caregiver position...Sacks, a practicing
neurologist in New York City, blends centuries-old medical wisdom,
current research, and observation of his own patients into an
engaging summary of every way our brains seek to depart from
reality...Sacks writes with uncommon clarity." -St. Louis
Post-Dispatch "In this fascinating and engaging 'anthology of
hallucinations, ' Sacks uses the unique mixture of patient
anecdote, memoir, scientific information, and broad reference to
literature, art, music, history, and philosophy that has
characterized all his work to explore various types of visual,
auditory, tactile, and other illusory sensations." -Boston
Globe "Sacks is one of the great scientific writers of our
time." -Baltimore City Paper "[Sacks] is particularly adept
at giving readers and overarching view of hallucinations through
time, finding just the right obscure journal article or bygone
diary entry form which to quote...Each chapter features personal
stories of those who have experienced hallucinations. These tales
are at turns delightful, entertaining, bizarre and sometimes
downright terrifying. Those willing to open up to Sacks about their
experiences did so in the hope of shedding light upon this
misunderstood topic. They could not have turned to a more trusted
source." -Minneapolis Star Tribune "Sacks is that unique
scientific raconteur, with a spellbinding gift for recording the
experiences of his own patients and collecting remarkable personal
anecdotes from colleagues, correspondents, and the literature...It
is remarkable to see the consistency of this literate, inquiring
mind, the scrupulous attention to details, the interwoven themes
from earlier books, and the constant joy of the frequently
incredible and always miraculous ways that human experience can
respond to stress and adapt to deficit and disease."
-Philadelphia Inquirer "With his special mix of patient case
studies, historical accounts, reader correspondence and personal
experience, Oliver Sacks has again found a way to unlock one of the
mysteries of our brains...fascinating and often funny." -The
Miami Herald "Super-fascinating and accessible...Sacks is
crazy-smart, and it shows. But he's also just flat-out amazed by
the brain, and it's an enthusiasm you can't help but catch." -Book
Riot "Sacks writes, as usual, with a sharp mix of clinical
precision, curiosity, and compassion." -The Daily Beast "[Sacks']
gentle, humane acceptance of the vast variety of mental experience
is both reassuring and provocative." -The Columbus Dispatch
"Sacks manages to make something beguiling of the many ways our
brains trick us...astonishing." -Chicago Tribune
"Hallucinations seeks to work against our preconceptions,
whether they have to do with clinical distance or the larger
question of what hallucination means...fascinating." -Newark
Star Ledger "Learned but not pretentious, fine but not
ostentatious, informative but not dense...The successful
integration of so many disparate materials, and kinds of materials,
keeps the pace of Hallucinations lively...As does Sacks' ability to
explain the physiological mechanisms at work in the production of
hallucinations without detracting from their essential
strangeness." -Pop Matters "Science begins and ends with us. It is
a very welcome shock when the bearer of this news is also a fluid
and generous writer, a polymath who over the course of a dozen
books has given us back our brains...Nowhere is the artistic
creativity of the human mind more vividly on display...with Oliver
Sacks as our guide, a trip to the familiar always becomes
enchantingly, enduringly, strange." -Barnes and Noble Review
"Absorbing...Sacks clearly explains and categorizes an amazing
assortment of hallucinations." -BookPage "Fascinating...Sacks has
given the world great gifts through his writing about neuroscience
and his compassionate treatment of patients." -The Fix "Sacks' book
comes at a time of exciting developments in hallucination
science...It is observations such as these, derived from the
consulting room, that challenge the neuroscience of perception--and
Sacks is leading the way." -Nature "A fascinating and
accessible read." -Time Out Chicago "Charmingly bizarre."
-Science News "Fascinating and illuminating...Highly recommended."
-Choice Magazine
Olive Sacks sets himself a challenging task in his latest book: to explore the full range of human hallucinations, those figments of the imagination that terrify, madden, comfort, or merely entertain. Drawing on famous cases, from Joan of Arc to Dostoyevski, Sacks charts a diverse and pervasive phenomenon, one rich in colorful examples caused by trauma, drugs, illnesses, the mind's deterioration, or boredom and the absence of stimuli. The scope of human hallucinations Sacks presents is staggering for its range, myriad causes, and levels of severity. Some hallucinations are little more than distractions: an imagined song in place of silence, a conversation with an absent friend, a light sense of deja vu. For others hallucinations create the fabric of the world in which they live, with the often-frightening images overwhelming reality. The solid performance of Dan Woren, whose business-like narration is the one constant throughout, keeps the listener grounded even during the book's most fantastic passages. Woren offers a brisk reading that when paired with the author's elegant prose guides listeners safely on a long and surreal journey through fantasy and nightmare. A Knopf hardcover. (Nov.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
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