
Unthinkable
An Extraordinary Journey Through the World's Strangest Brains
$39.22
- Paperback
304 pages
- Release Date
8 January 2019
Summary
‘Wonderfully clear, fluent and eye-opening’ THE TIMES
‘A stirring scientific journey, a celebration of human diversity and a call to rethink the “unthinkable”’ NATURE
‘An utterly fascinating romp around the nether regions of the human mind’ BIG ISSUE
IMAGINE … getting lost in a one-room flat; seeing auras; never forgetting a moment; a permanent orchestra in your head; turning into a tiger; life as …
Book Details
| ISBN-13: | 9781473611771 |
|---|---|
| ISBN-10: | 1473611776 |
| Author: | Helen Thomson |
| Publisher: | John Murray Press |
| Imprint: | John Murray Publishers Ltd |
| Format: | Paperback |
| Number of Pages: | 304 |
| Release Date: | 8 January 2019 |
| Weight: | 246g |
| Dimensions: | 198mm x 128mm x 22mm |
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What They're Saying
Critics Review
A stirring scientific journey, a celebration of human diversity and a call to rethink the ‘unthinkable’
This wonderfully clear, fluent, eye-opening book explores what happens when the mind misbehaves: distance is distorted, memory plays tricks, people hear in colour and see in music. Helen Thomson is the science teacher you wish you’d had at school … The unruliness of the misfiring brain is what makes Unthinkable so fascinating and so frightening … Thomson’s book repays careful reading. Don’t skip the science to get on to the well-I-never case histories. You need both together. And when the doctors Thomson interviews conclude, at the end of their examinations, that they simply cannot explain the weird workings of the brain, it isn’t a “dunno” of defeat, but of wonder - THE TIMES
Thomson brings intellectual rigour to each subject, discussing history, causes, treatment and more, in what amounts to an utterly fascinating romp around the nether regions of the human mind - Big IssueA stirring scientific journey, a celebration of human diversity and a call to rethink the ‘unthinkable’ - NATUREImagine turning into a tiger. Or getting permanently lost in your own one bedroom home. It sounds like the stuff of nightmares - but this is the engrossing subject of Thomson’s exploration of extraordinary brains. With flair and empathy, the author sees her subjects in the context of their everyday lives, allowing us to marvel at their humanity … accessible, well researched, thought-provoking. Like The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat, Unthinkable offers us a wondrous array of rare and weird disorders…This lucid and compelling book not only celebrates the incredible machinery we call the brain, it’s also full of insights and invaluable tips. Thomson tells us how to forge memories that never disappear; how to grow an alien limb. And don’t forget to make an animal noise next time you turn off the gas hob - it’ll help you remember you’ve switched it off later in the day. We are our brains, and they are stranger than we think - TATLERRefreshingly personal… humane and often humorous - EVENING STANDARDExceptional… From seeing auras and turning into a tiger, to waking up ‘dead’ and being able to remember every single day of your life in vivid detail, award-winning science journalist Thomson investigates wondrously rare and strange brain disorders in this terrific debut. While acknowledging her debt to the late, great Oliver Sacks, Thomson sets out to do things t differently by meeting her nine subjects not in clinical environments but as they live their daily lives with extraordinary brains. Theirs are mystery stories, spellbinding and true.” - BOOKSELLER, Science Book of the MonthAbout The Author
Helen Thomson
Helen Thomson is a writer and consultant with New Scientist. She has also written for the Guardian, Daily Mail, BBC Future and Psychologies and has won various awards for her journalism.
Her research has taken her from coffee with five psychopathic mass murderers in Broadmoor to poking around in the Large Hadron Collider. She has exclusively revealed plans for the world’s first head transplant, learned how to rule at roulette, had her fat zapped, scrubbed up for a cutting-edge prostate cancer operation and watched a paralysed man walk for the first time using a mind-controlled exoskeleton. But her greatest fascination remains writing about the brain, especially those that don’t look like everyone else’s.
Helen has a BSc in Neuroscience and an MSc in Science Communication. She lives in London. This is her first book.
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