The Man Who Mistook His Wife For A Hat: And Other Clinical Tales
by Oliver W. Sacks
|
|
Sign in to Goodreads to see your friends' reviews of The Man Who Mistook His Wife For A Hat: And Other Clinical Tales.
discuss this book
friend reviews (0)
To see what your friends thought of this book, please sign up.
lists with this book
Where's the love? Add this book to your favorite list.
other reviews (showing 1-20 of 4966)
Read in June, 1996
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
bookshelves:
junioryearadvisoryreadingnovels
The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat
While I was reading this chapter of this book, I came to realize that our hearing aid and our vision for music are very important because when Dr. P lost his vivid imagination, he relied on the body-music instead of body-image. Dr. P had a “massive tumour or degenerative process in the visual parts of his brain” (Sacks 19). I couldn’t believe that he was actually a music teacher who couldn’t recognize his students but when they moved, he seems to r...more
While I was reading this chapter of this book, I came to realize that our hearing aid and our vision for music are very important because when Dr. P lost his vivid imagination, he relied on the body-music instead of body-image. Dr. P had a “massive tumour or degenerative process in the visual parts of his brain” (Sacks 19). I couldn’t believe that he was actually a music teacher who couldn’t recognize his students but when they moved, he seems to r...more
Like this review?
yes
(1 person liked it)
add a comment
bookshelves:
nonfiction,
science-health
I first heard about this book when my biology professor mentioned it in class in reference to right-brain and left-brain disorders. Just last year, I had the good fortune to see the author himself - Dr. Sacks - speak at the university in my hometown. He was a dynamic and entertaining speaker and from then on, I resolved to try out his books. The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat matched its author. The book is a collection of case studies on Dr. Sacks's patients with neurological disorders. Sac...more
Like this review?
yes
(2 people liked it)
1 comments
Read in October, 2007
Over the course of his long career as a neurologist, Sacks has had plenty of interesting cases. It makes you appreciate what a complex organ the brain is when you see all the different ways that impairments can manifest themselves. Sacks is at his best when he's describing the most unusual quirks. The first chapter -- the case that gives the book its title -- is a good lead-in to the weird behaviors that follow.
At the time the book was written, these disorders must have seemed even more u...more
At the time the book was written, these disorders must have seemed even more u...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
Read in March, 2008
Dear Dr. Sacks,
On page 112 of the paperback edition of your book, the second paragraph begins with the following sentence:
"And with this, no feeling that he has lost feeling (for the feeling he has lost), no feeling that he has lost the depth, that unfathomable, mysterious, myriad-levelled depth which somehow defines identity or reality."
I've read this sentence at least twelve times, and I still don't even have the slightest inkling of what the hell it means. What ...more
On page 112 of the paperback edition of your book, the second paragraph begins with the following sentence:
"And with this, no feeling that he has lost feeling (for the feeling he has lost), no feeling that he has lost the depth, that unfathomable, mysterious, myriad-levelled depth which somehow defines identity or reality."
I've read this sentence at least twelve times, and I still don't even have the slightest inkling of what the hell it means. What ...more
Like this review?
yes
(2 people liked it)
add a comment
bookshelves:
advisory-2007-2008
This book was pretty amazing because it introduced new ideas and concepts about the wonders in the world. This novel talks about the mysteries of what the world can enfold. For example, there was a chapter about how a man couldn't do simple math, yet when he saw complex things such as a box of matches that fell and dispersed on the floor, he was able to mentally count the amount of matches within a few seconds. This fascinated me because I have always thought that there were some parts of the...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
bookshelves:
health
Read in January, 2008
very interesting neurological case studies that begged me to reconsider intelligence and "normalcy" particularly in terms of visual perception and its relationship to reality as well as the profound structure that the arts (he specifically mentions music, dance, story-telling and drawing) provide for those with the inability to form or develop conceptual frameworks. Indeed, it seems that the fine arts aren't just high-concepts of beauty and art, but healing mechanisms crucial to many ...more
Like this review?
yes
(1 person liked it)
add a comment
Read in January, 2002
recommends it for:
anyone curious on human mind
I can't recall exactly why and when I was first drawn to Oliver Sacks' writing. 'Awakenings' was the first Sacks' book that I read and I fell in love with his writings rightaway. I've always been fascinated with the human brain and Dr. Sacks' journals on his neurology cases are full with unusual insights on how the mind works through defects and diseases.
Although the initial interest was admittedly more on the 'freak-shows' (imagine someone who actually sees his wife as a HAT, or someone who...more
Although the initial interest was admittedly more on the 'freak-shows' (imagine someone who actually sees his wife as a HAT, or someone who...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
bookshelves:
currently-reading
Read in July, 2008
Despite so many people recommending this book, my high expectations were disappointed. Yes, it's perversely interesting to hear about neurological conundrums that afflict people in peculiar ways, but Sacks isn't a particularly good writer, nor does he have a good grasp on his audience. At times he obliquely refers to medical syndromes or footnotes other neurologists, as if he is writing for a technical physician audience, but on the whole his stories are too simplistic to engage such an audienc...more
Like this review?
yes
(1 person liked it)
add a comment
Read in April, 2003
I'd d started reading The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat sometime last year, but managed to misplace the book. Found it again last week & put it in my "To Read" pile. I grabbed it on the way to the vet appt. What I didn't get read there, I finished when we got home.
It's a collection of stories about men & women with unusual neurological disorders. I say "stories" instead of "case histories" as Sacks treats each patient as a person, not just a diagnos...more
It's a collection of stories about men & women with unusual neurological disorders. I say "stories" instead of "case histories" as Sacks treats each patient as a person, not just a diagnos...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
bookshelves:
advisory
Read in March, 2008
This is a book based on true stories. They're mini short stories of people's psychological behavior and analysis on their cognitive thinking. One story that stood out to me was a man who was always happy and energetic all the time. A psychologist came up to him and asked him to draw the same drawing she just drew which was a box with an x in the center and a circle around it. The patient decided to draw a stick figure flying a kite. What interesting about this drawing was that it looked nothing ...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
Read in October, 2007
Some of the writings collected here were originally published under the heading "Curios", and they successfully deliver on that score -- fantastic, unimaginable, curious in the extreme.
But the book is about more than that --
Split between left and right brain, art and science, romantic evocation and clinical ___, emotion and cognition, experience and abstraction.
His case builds, curio after curio, for a "romantic neuropsychology," one of people, whole patients, wit...more
But the book is about more than that --
Split between left and right brain, art and science, romantic evocation and clinical ___, emotion and cognition, experience and abstraction.
His case builds, curio after curio, for a "romantic neuropsychology," one of people, whole patients, wit...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
Read in November, 2007
'animals get diseases, but only man falls radically into sickness.'
'But were there depths in this unmemoried man, depths of an abiding feeling and thinking, or had he been reduced to a sort of Humean drivel, a mere succession of unrelated impressions and events?'
'"Dangerous wellness", "morbid brilliance", a deceptive euphoria with abysses beneath – this is the trap promised and threatened by excess, whether it be set by Nature, in the form of some intoxicating disor...more
'But were there depths in this unmemoried man, depths of an abiding feeling and thinking, or had he been reduced to a sort of Humean drivel, a mere succession of unrelated impressions and events?'
'"Dangerous wellness", "morbid brilliance", a deceptive euphoria with abysses beneath – this is the trap promised and threatened by excess, whether it be set by Nature, in the form of some intoxicating disor...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
bookshelves:
favoritesincessantlyreread
Completely changed my philosophy of mind. Very accessibly, and anecdotally, takes a look at the ways a person's entire personality or concept of the world can be warped by simple and localized damage to the brain.
Sacks is definitely playing the affable old med school prof here, spinning anecdotes into sweet little stories about the strange yet lovable people he's met in his research. Still, his writing is fantastically clear and the stories drag you in, from the man with no long term memor...more
Sacks is definitely playing the affable old med school prof here, spinning anecdotes into sweet little stories about the strange yet lovable people he's met in his research. Still, his writing is fantastically clear and the stories drag you in, from the man with no long term memor...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
Read in August, 2007
recommends it for:
Brainiacs... and those with regular brains
Divergent facets of my life are uniting to deliver an auspicious message: We do not know the limits of our brains. In yoga I learn about clearing space in my mind for peace. Ditto Buddhism. In books on writing I learn to allow my brain to run wild, the best form of freedom.
And this book is no exception to my current life-theme. Split into bite-sized case studies, The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat is challenging, chilling, scintillating, and joyful. A truly humanitarian physicia...more
And this book is no exception to my current life-theme. Split into bite-sized case studies, The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat is challenging, chilling, scintillating, and joyful. A truly humanitarian physicia...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
bookshelves:
nonfiction
Read in June, 2007
A fascinating book that is a collection of clinical stories about neurological pathologies. It's a fascinating book so far, dealing with what governs our always-shifting sense of reality. Highlights so far have been the title essay, about a professor who couldn't see concrete reality, only the abstract and ritualized. Also, the essay titled, "The President's Speech," about a group of aphasics who couldn't understand written speech, only inferring meaning from body language and facial...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
Read in May, 2008
I picked up this book because I am a fan of Oliver Sacks and his various speaking engagements (lectures, public radio interviews, etc)...but I have to say I was fairly nonplussed with it.
While the case studies in and of themselves make for interesting reading, the tone of the writing is fairly "clinical" and...removed. Despite the review blurbs stating that these are "personal" and "touchingly human" looks at neurological disorders, I saw only a few glimpses of...more
While the case studies in and of themselves make for interesting reading, the tone of the writing is fairly "clinical" and...removed. Despite the review blurbs stating that these are "personal" and "touchingly human" looks at neurological disorders, I saw only a few glimpses of...more
Like this review?
yes
(1 person liked it)
add a comment
A beautifully written collection of rather disturbing yet fascinating clinical essays on various neurological pathologies. The book reads more like a collection of short stories rather than clinical studies illuminating the complexities and delicate balances in the human brain and the bizarre things that can happen when these balances are upset. He is able to position these neurological disorders in a very unique light, making me empathize with the patient and get a tiny glimpse of what it must ...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
Read in January, 2008
Yes, this was an effective summary/presentation of very complicated neurological conditions. But beyond each story it gets bogged down in a bit more scientific jargon than I'd like. Fascinating stuff but it may be easier to digest as magazine articles. With all that we've learned about the human brain, Sack's stories convinced me that it (the brain) is even more mysterious and wonderful than we ever imagined. Internal songs that play over and over again in our head? People that are stuck in time...more
Like this review?
yes
add a comment
Read in July, 1980
recommends it for:
Anyone with an interest in out-of-the-ordinary people and events.
Absolutely amazing! In "The Man Who Mistook His Wife For A Hat", the author, a prominent neurosurgeun, introduces the reader to his most interesting patients, all of whom have sustained - and are coping with - varying degrees of brain damage. In this collection, you'll gain insights into the astonishing inner world of the neurological patient: the titular patient, who was completely baffled by an object he was asked to identify - until he smelled it; the man who mistook a zoo's tigres...more
Like this review?
yes
(1 person liked it)
add a comment


























