 |
Book Reviews of AwakeningsBook Review: Medical Case histories as great art Summary: 5 Stars
Oliver Sacks has elevated the case history in Awakenings to a literary art form of the highest kind. A neurologist in charge of a ward of people left high and dry by the 1918 flu epidemic which left them in a profound catatonic state, an extreme form of Parkinson's, he experiments on his patients with a new wonder drug L-Dopa which proves a mixed blessing for them. Some are awakened to brilliant life for a brief time, but most of them are doomed either to revert to their original condition or to die (several know they are going to die and announce the fact). Dr. Sacks (who looks quite demonic on the cover photo) uses his medical powers to change lives with a high-handedness that is almost Faustian. The effects are so extraordinary and strange that some of these stories read like the finest fantasy. All the stories are wonderfully strange, proving that human consciousness is many-faceted and that what we label "disease" may be merely a new avenue of perception. Some of these people perform acts not only bizarre but improbable, showing an unusual level of vitality and no ordinary degree of power. There are people here able to fill whole buckets with their saliva, people who rise from beds they have not left for 30 years with no muscle atrophy, people whose extraperception provide them with a life invisible to others, people who fall into pits unseen by anyone else in a perfectly ordinary hospital hall, unless securely in contact with others, people who can only move "normally" to music, people occupying a strange anachronistic limbo, stuck in the time when they first fell ill, and people who move as slowly as plants grow, whose time sense is distorted so that they seem motionless as statues for hours of a time arrested in mid-movement, though in their own perception, they are completing an activity (brushing their hair) at an ordinary pace. This is Sack's greatest work, a riveting portrait of human possibilities at their most extreme.
Book Review: Most of the people who bought this 5 Stars
....probably threw it away without finishing the first page. And that's sad, because it's a fine book, 95% of which can be understood by any intelligent person willing to work at it. I bought this in a bookstore shortly after seeing the movie...it was sold in a very nice display, meant to capitalize on the movie. This I consider to have been improper [NOT illegal; this is America] marketing; within the first paragraph, Dr. Sacks is talking about the difference between upper and lower motor neuron lesions [THAT brought back memories], infinite motion, infinite rigidity...99+% of the poor folks who wasted their money were blown away. The rest of us were hooked by a fabulous book.
Most will know the story...in the years after WWI, an epidemic of viral encephalitis swept the country. Over the next several years, some of the survivors developed a severe form of Parkinson's, gradually becoming completely immobile, and landing in nursing homes. This was not a vegatative state; as we found out much later, these poor souls were fully aware of their plight. In the summer of 1969, Dr. Oliver Sacks took a job in a New York City long-term care facility, and decided to give some of these post-encephalitis patients what was then a brand-new drug, L-Dopa. The miracle was profound; the patients "awakened" [not really the right term]....alas, the miracle was temporary...side effects appeared, the therapeutic range shrunk, and the patients went back to their old state, or worse. Actually, some of the "cures" were more or less "permanent", but these were a minority. "Awakenings" is a series of case studies, the story of agony, short-term ectasy, then more agony. Medicine is like that; all progress meets failure along the way. This book lets the reader know what that feels like to the doctor. L-Dopa, with its derivatives, is still around; it's still dangerous for anyone not an expert to use.
Oliver Sacks is a Neurologist, and writes like one [and like a philosopher]. That's OK. He combines skill with compassion and basic human decency; if any of my family needed a Neurologist, I'd want Oliver Sacks. Neurology, like Oncology, is a sad specialty, with a lot of unhappy endings. Despite having an interest, and aptitude, that's probably why I didn't end up in it. This is a truly profound book; unless you're a Neurologist [not just a physician], you will need the glossery. However, your effort will be well rewarded.
Book Review: The best book about an event I have ever read! Summary: 5 Stars
I believe this book is a great book to read for the following reasons:1. It explains in great detail, an event that stock the world, in the summer of 1969. 2. This book has detailed decribtions of the patients with the Parkinsonism disease. 3. And, if anyone has ever seen the movie Awakenings with Robin Williams, this book is worth having because it is the REAL doctor which Robin Williams plays, that is the author to this great book!
Book Review: The book version of the movie Summary: 5 Stars
I saw the movie called AWAKENINGS (with Robt. DeNiro and Robin Williams) and was intrigued, so I bought this book by Sachs. I was not disappointed. The book is so much more thorough than the movie , and I must say...much more technical.
Infact, the book is so technical that it could take the reader quite a while to decipher all the medical terms included & to read the entire book quickly. Take your time with this one.
As a non-medical student, it took me a while to read through this book, but it was worth it! Also, the other good thing is that the book gives a good "encyclodepia" of all the medical terms in the book's NOTES.
Book Review: Wonderfully written, but less than that of his other work... Summary: 4 Stars
If I had never read "The Man who Mistook his Wife for a Hat" before this book (both by the same author), I would have rated this as a five-star classic. Though as well written as the other work, this book presents his studies in a less humane, and more scientific way. Read the other work and one will sense the noticeable difference in the way that Dr. Sacks approached his patients. When reading the "Awakenings", I felt as a detached bystander looking through the windows of his clinic and observing the patients. When reading "The Man who Mistook his Wife for a Hat", I was so engaged by Dr. Sacks vivid descriptions of the patients, physically, intellectually, emotionally and spiritually, that it was as if I was face-to-face with the patients, and that I was connected in some intrinsic way to each and every one of them. Please please read the other work as well as this one.
More Awakenings reviews: 1 2 3 4
|
 |