Oliver Sacks is a physician and the author of nine previous books, including "The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat "and" Awakenings "(which inspired the Oscar-nominated film). He lives in New York City, where he is Professor of Clinical Neurology at Columbia University.
"Dr. Sacks writes not just as a doctor and a scientist but also as
a humanist with a philosophical and literary bent. . . [his] book
not only contributes to our understanding of the elusive magic of
music but also illuminates the strange workings, and misfirings, of
the human mind."
-Michiko Kakutani, "The New York Times"
"Oliver Sacks turns his formidable attention to music and the brain
. . . He doesn't stint on the science . . . but the underlying
authority of "Musicophilia" lies in the warmth and easy command of
the author's voice."
-Mark Coleman, Los Angeles Times
"His work is luminous, original, and indispensable . . .
"Musicophilia" is a Chopin mazurka recital of a book, fast,
inventive and weirdly beautiful . . . Yet what is most
awe-inspiring is his observational empathy."
-"American Scholar"
"Curious, cultured, caring, in his person Sacks justifies the
medical profession and, one is tempted to say, the human race . . .
Sacks is, in short, the ideal exponent of the view that
responsiveness to music is intrinsic to our makeup. He is also the
ideal guide to the territory he covers. "Musicophilia" allows
readers to join Sacks where he is most alive, amid melodies and
with his patients."
-Peter D. Kramer, "The Washington Post
"
"Readers will be grateful that Sacks . . . is happy to revel in
phenomena that he cannot yet explain."
-"The New York Times Book Review
""The persuasive essays about composers, patients, savants, and
ordinary people . . . offer captivating variations on the central
premise that human beings are 'exquisitely tuned' to the
illuminating yet ultimately mysterious powers of music."
-"Elle"
"With the exception of Lewis Thomas, no physician has ever written
better about his trade."
-"Salon
"
"A gifted writer and a neurologist, Sacks spins one fascinating
tale after another to show what happens when music and the brain
mix it up."
"-Newsweek
"
"Powerful and compassionate . . . Dr. Sacks has written a book that
not only contributes to our understanding of the elusive magic of
music but also illuminates the strange workings, and misfirings, of
the human mind...He is able in these pages to convey both the
fathomless mysteries of the human brain and the equally profound
mysteries of music."
-"The New York Times"
"Curious, cultured, caring, in his person Sacks justifies the
medical profession and, one is tempted to say, the human race . . .
Sacks is, in short, the ideal exponent of the view that
responsiveness to music is intrinsic to our makeup. He is also the
ideal guide to the territory he covers. "Musicophilia" allows
readers to join Sacks where he is most alive, amid melodies and
with his patients."
-Peter D. Kramer, "The Washington Post
"
"Readers will be grateful that Sacks . . . is happy to revel in
phenomena that he cannot yet explain."
-"The New York Times Book Review
""The persuasive essays about composers, patients, savants, and
ordinary people . . . offer captivating variations on the central
premise that human beings are 'exquisitely tuned' to the
illuminating yet ultimately mysterious powers of music."
-"Elle"
"The underlying authority of "Musicophilia" lies in the warmth and
easy command of the author's voice. Sacks has an expert bedside
manner: informed but humble, self-questioning, literary without
being self-conscious . . . his prose [is] passionate and
informative."
-"The Los Angeles Times"
"With the exception of Lewis Thomas, no physician has ever written
better about his trade."
-"Salon
"
"A gifted writer and a neurologist, Sacks spins one fascinating
tale afteranother to show what happens when music and the brain mix
it up."
"-Newsweek
"
"Luminous, original, and indispensable . . . "Musicophilia" is like
a concert of Mozart's mazurkas: fast, inventive and weirdly
beautiful . . . yet what is most inspiring is his empathy."
-"American Scholar"
"Like the case studies that informed and appeared in his previous
books, "The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat" and "Awakenings"
(which inspired the Oscar-nominated film by the same name), [in
"Musicophilia"] Dr. Sacks guides readers through the fascinating,
disturbing, inspiring stories of clinical dilemmas he encounters .
. . Evocative, thought-provoking and compassionate beyond measure,
this is a book to cherish."
-"The Washington Times"
"In "Musicophilia," Sacks. . . shares the extraordinary stories of
people whose personal worlds have been transformed by music."
-"The Toronto Star"
"Sacks is the consummate storyteller . . . his great gift-as a
physician as well as a writer-is to see the whole person, rather
than just the brain or the disease.
"Sacks is an unparalleled chronicler of modern medicine, and fans
of his work will find much to enjoy when he turns his prodigious
talent for observation to music and its relationship to the brain .
. . This book leaves one a little more attuned to the remarkable
complexity of human beings, and a bit more conscious of the role of
music in our lives."
"-Publishers Weekly
"
"Neurologist Sacks, one of the foremost physician-essayists of the
day, charmingly argues that music is essential to being human in
ways that have only begun to be understood. . . His customary
erudition and fellow-feeling ensure that, no matterhow clinical the
discussion becomes, it remains, like the music of Mozart,
accessible and congenial."
"-Booklist
"
"If we could prescribe what our physicians would be like, a good
number of us would probably choose somebody like Sacks. Learned,
endlessly inquisitive and seemingly possessed of a bottomless store
of human compassion, the neurologist's authorial personality both
reassures and arouses curiosity . . . Sacks is as good a guide to
this mysterious and barely understood world as one could ask for,
mixing serious case studies with personal takes on music and what
its ultimate uses could possibly be."
"-Kirkus
"
"Curious, cultured, caring, in his person Sacks justifies the
medical profession and, one is tempted to say, the human race . . .
Sacks is, in short, the ideal exponent of the view that
responsiveness to music is intrinsic to our makeup. He is also the
ideal guide to the territory he covers. "Musicophilia" allows
readers to join Sacks where he is most alive, amid melodies and
with his patients."
-Peter D. Kramer, "The Washington Post
"
"Readers will be grateful that Sacks . . . is happy to revel in
phenomena that he cannot yet explain."
-"The New York Times
""The persuasive essays about composers, patients, savants, and
ordinary people . . . offer captivating variations on the central
premise that human beings are 'exquisitely tuned' to the
illuminating yet ultimately mysterious powers of music."
-"Elle"
"The underlying authority of "Musicophilia" lies in the warmth and
easy command of the author's voice. Sacks has an expert bedside
manner: informed but humble, self-questioning, literary without
being self-conscious . . . his prose [is] passionate and
informative."
-"The Los Angeles Times"
"With the exception of Lewis Thomas, no physician has ever written
better about his trade."
-"Salon
"
"A gifted writer and a neurologist, Sacks spins one fascinating
tale after another to show what happens when music and the brain
mix it up."
"-Newsweek
"
"Luminous, original, and indispensable . . . "Musicophilia" is like
a concert of Mozart's mazurkas: fast, inventive and weirdly
beautiful . . . yet what is most inspiring is his empathy."
-"American Scholar"
"Like the case studies that informed and appeared in his previous
books, "The Man WhoMistook His Wife for a Hat" and "Awakenings"
(which inspired the Oscar-nominated film by the same name), [in
"Musicophilia"] Dr. Sacks guides readers through the fascinating,
disturbing, inspiring stories of clinical dilemmas he encounters .
. . Evocative, thought-provoking and compassionate beyond measure,
this is a book to cherish."
-"The Washington Times"
"In "Musicophilia," Sacks. . . shares the extraordinary stories of
people whose personal worlds have been transformed by music."
-"The Toronto Star"
"Sacks is the consummate storyteller . . . his great gift-as a
physician as well as a writer-is to see the whole person, rather
than just the brain or the disease.
"Sacks is an unparalleled chronicler of modern medicine, and fans
of his work will find much to enjoy when he turns his prodigious
talent for observation to music and its relationship to the brain .
. . This book leaves one a little more attuned to the remarkable
complexity of human beings, and a bit more conscious of the role of
music in our lives."
"-Publishers Weekly
"
"Neurologist Sacks, one of the foremost physician-essayists of the
day, charmingly argues that music is essential to being human in
ways that have only begun to be understood. . . His customary
erudition and fellow-feeling ensure that, no matter how clinical
the discussion becomes, it remains, like the music of Mozart,
accessible and congenial."
"-Booklist
"
"If we could prescribe what our physicians would be like, a good
number of us would probably choose somebody like Sacks. Learned,
endlessly inquisitive and seemingly possessed of a bottomless store
of human compassion, the neurologist's authorial personality
bothreassures and arouses curiosity . . . Sacks is as good a guide
to this mysterious and barely understood world as one could ask
for, mixing serious case studies with personal takes on music and
what its ultimate uses could possibly be."
"-Kirkus
"
"Sacks is an unparalleled chronicler of modern medicine, and fans
of his work will find much to enjoy when he turns his prodigious
talent for observation to music and its relationship to the brain .
. . This book leaves one a little more attuned to the remarkable
complexity of human beings, and a bit more conscious of the role of
music in our lives."
"-Publishers Weekly
"
"Neurologist Sacks, one of the foremost physician-essayists of the
day, charmingly argues that music is essential to being human in
ways that have only begun to be understood. . . His customary
erudition and fellow-feeling ensure that, no matter how clinical
the discussion becomes, it remains, like the music of Mozart,
accessible and congenial."
"-Booklist
"
"If we could prescribe what our physicians would be like, a good
number of us would probably choose somebody like Sacks. Learned,
endlessly inquisitive and seemingly possessed of a bottomless store
of human compassion, the neurologist's authorial personality both
reassures and arouses curiosity . . . Sacks is as good a guide to
this mysterious and barely understood world as one could ask for,
mixing serious case studies with personal takes on music and what
its ultimate uses could possibly be."
"-Kirkus
"
"A gifted writer and a neurologist, Sacks spins one fascinating
tale after another to show what happens when music and the brain
mix it up."
"-Newsweek
"
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