The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a HatRecommendations

Author:
Oliver Sacks
Buy on Amazon
Buy on Apple Books

About the book

In his most extraordinary book, “one of the great clinical writers of the twentieth century” (The New York Times) recounts the case histories of patients lost in the bizarre, apparently inescapable world of neurological disorders.

Oliver Sacks’s The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat tells the stories of individuals afflicted with fantastic perceptual and intellectual aberrations: patients who have lost their memories and with them the greater part of their pasts; who are no longer able to recognize people and common objects; who are stricken with violent tics and grimaces or who shout involuntary obscenities; whose limbs have become alien; who have been dismissed as retarded yet are gifted with uncanny artistic or mathematical talents.

If inconceivably strange, these brilliant tales remain, in Dr. Sacks’s splendid and sympathetic telling, deeply human. They are studies of life struggling against incredible adversity, and they enable us to enter the world of the neurologically impaired, to imagine with our hearts what it must be to live and feel as they do. A great healer, Sacks never loses sight of medicine’s ultimate responsibility: “the suffering, afflicted, fighting human subject.”

Related books

Enlightenment Now

Steven Pinker

Moonwalking with Einstein

Joshua Foer

Lifespan

David Sinclair

Stumbling on Happiness

Daniel Todd Gilbert

Superintelligence

Nick Bostrom

We Are the Weather

Jonathan Safran Foer

Bad Blood

John Carreyrou

In Defense of Food

Michael Pollan

The Coddling of the American Mind

Jonathan Haidt & Greg Lukianoff

The Talent Code

Daniel Coyle