The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat, 9781841594132
Hardcover
Strange neurological disorders reveal the brain’s mysteries, humanity’s resilience.

The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat

$34.07

  • Hardcover

    344 pages

  • Release Date

    8 January 2024

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Summary

An Everyman Classic hardback edition of Dr Sacks’s most extraordinary book, in which the ‘poet laureate of medicine’ recounts fascinating case histories of patients with neurological disorders. Introduced by Atul Gawande, American surgeon and writer, who has said that no one taught him more about how to be a doctor than Oliver Sacks.

Neurologist Oliver Sacks investigates the complex relationship between the brain and the mind and, almost impossibly, manages to make his subject matter …

Book Details

ISBN-13:9781841594132
ISBN-10:184159413X
Author:Oliver Sacks
Publisher:Everyman
Imprint:Everyman's Library
Format:Hardcover
Number of Pages:344
Release Date:8 January 2024
Weight:480g
Dimensions:208mm x 120mm x 28mm
Series:Everyman’s Library Contemporary Classics
What They're Saying

Critics Review

Populated by a cast as strange as that of the most fantastic fiction … Dr Sacks shows the awesome powers of our mind and just how delicately balanced they have to be. * Sunday Times *This book is for everybody who has felt from time to time that certain twinge of self-identity and sensed how easily, at any moment, one might lose it. * The Times *Oliver Sacks has become the world’s best-known neurologist. His case studies of broken minds offer brilliant insight into the mysteries of consciousness * Guardian *Insightful, compassionate, moving … the lucidity and power of a gifted writer * New York Times Book Review *

About The Author

Oliver Sacks

Oliver Sacks was born in London in 1933 into a family of physicians and scientists, and studied medicine at Oxford University. He moved to New York in 1965, where he began to work as a consultant for the Beth Abraham Hospital in the Bronx, a chronic care hospital. Later in his career he became as a professor of neurology at Columbia University and at NYU. His first book, Migraine, was published in 1970; his last, Gratitude, in 2015, shortly after his death. Other books include Awakenings (1973), An Anthropologist on Mars (1995) and The Mind’s Eye (2010). He received honours from, amongst others, the Guggenheim Foundation, the American Academy of Art and Letters, and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.

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