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Paperback Vintage Sacks Book

ISBN: 1400033977

ISBN13: 9781400033973

Vintage Sacks

Vintage Readers are a perfect introduction to some of the great modern writers presented in attractive, accessible paperback editions. "It is Dr. Sacks's gift that he has found a way to enlarge our... This description may be from another edition of this product.

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Customer Reviews

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A Pleasent 200 pages.

This book is most likely the last novel I will be reading this summer. Unfortunately, I have other pressing engagements. But what a brilliant way to end my summer reading stint by reading Sacks! The title "the poet laureate of medicine" is clearly a befitting one for Oliver Sacks. He has an uncanny way of making science lively, fun, and enjoyable. "Vintage Sacks" is a hodgepodge of his various works like "Uncle Tungsten", "Awakenings", "Seeing Voices" and others. The first two chapters are autobiographical, and both are a testament to his love of Science, especially chemistry. Chapter 2 (Stinks and Bangs") does look like a section straight out of a Chemistry textbook or a lab report. It made me think that if I had grown up anywhere near as privileged as Sacks has, I would have froliced with some explosive chemicals in a private lab too. Reading Sacks' books has given me interest in the roles of dopamine, L-dopa, Haldol, and other compounds and chemicals that affect the brain. Reading "Vintage Sacks" was enlightening in a profound way. The book deals with subjects like deafness, "oculogyric crises", Tourette's syndrome, and how the senses essentially work together. Dr. Bennett of "A Surgeon's Life" was fascinating. I think he aught to write his won autobiography. It would help to bring awareness to the syndrome. And Sacks' arguments for sign language in "A Deaf World" are compelling. Here, he takes on the voice of an activist. In "Pingelap", Sacks morphs into an awed explorer in the Pacific. This book would be a great introduction to anyone who might not have read any works by Oliver Sacks before.

An introduction to Sacks

I heard Dr. Oliver Sacks speak on BookTV recently. What caught my interest was his obvious love for science and the warm, humoruos manner in which he presented the studies and experiments borne of his curiosity. Looking at the list of books he has written in the last 30 or so years I chanced upon, Vintage Sacks. Having never read any of his works before this anthology, of sorts, seemd like a good place to start.The narrative literary form brings a "human" dimension to science and Dr. Sacks uses it to good affect. This is clearly seen in the selections from Awakings, Seeing Voices, and An Anthropologist on Mars. I found the selections from his autobiography, Uncle Tungsten, less compelling. Though, I must admit his categorizing of sulfur, selenium, and tellurium as "stinkogens" rather humoruos - especially given his penchant for experimenting with these odoriferous compounds and the resultant gas clouds. His retelling of the stories of his childhood on BookTV was far more endearing than the selections chosen from Uncle Tungsten. The addition of the selection from Migrain is rather puzzling. It is only 5 pages long and I can't really tell what purpose the book serves, or even the point he was trying to make. The rest of the selections are significantly longer - enough that you get a feel for the book and his style of writing.In Seeing Voices he talks about the difference between postlingual and prelingual deafness - a distinction I never really thought about. In postlingual deafness, the affected individual was able to hear before becoming deaf and thus able to develop language skills. Someone who is prelingually deaf was either born, or became shortly after birth, without the ability to hear and so in the absense of remedial measures did not develop language skills. Here is what Dr. Sacks has to say, "For the prelingually deaf, unable to hear their parents, risk being severely retarded, if not permanently defective, in their graps of language unless early and effective measures are taken." I'm sure you've wondered, as I have, if given a choice, would you rather be blind or deaf. Dr. Sacks has made me rethink my position.The selections from Awakenings bring to attention a malady of the early twentieth century that I had never heard of before: encephalitis lethargica, or "sleeping sickness". The thought of being in such a "trance-like" state for decades is unnerving; able only to communicate is whispers and short sentences, unable to move much at all, must be horrifying. One of Dr. Sack's patients, Rose R., descibes, when asked what she is thinking about, "Nothing, just nothing" - and she meant it almost literally.Overall this is a good place to start before reading his other books.
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