Tsvetoslav Shalev

31%
Flag icon
Tourette’s cannot be studied or understood in isolation, as a “syndrome” confined to the person who has it; it invariably has social consequences and comes to include or incorporate these as well. What one sees, therefore, is a complex negotiation between the affected individual and his world, a form of adaptation sometimes humorous and benign, at other times charged with conflict, pain, anxiety, and rage.
Everything in Its Place: First Loves and Last Tales (Picador Collection)
Rate this book
Clear rating
Open Preview