Letters
by Oliver Sacks
This title was previously available on NetGalley and is now archived.
Send NetGalley books directly to your Kindle or Kindle app
1
To read on a Kindle or Kindle app, please add kindle@netgalley.com as an approved email address to receive files in your Amazon account. Click here for step-by-step instructions.
2
Also find your Kindle email address within your Amazon account, and enter it here.
Pub Date 7 Nov 2024 | Archive Date 7 Nov 2024
Pan Macmillan | Picador
Talking about this book? Use #Letters #NetGalley. More hashtag tips!
Description
'Here is the unedited Oliver Sacks—struggling, passionate, a furiously intelligent misfit. And also endless interesting. He was a man like no other' Atul Gawande, author of Being Mortal
Oliver Sacks, one of the great humanists of our age – who describes himself in these pages as a ‘philosophical physician’ and an ‘astronomer of the inward’ – wrote to an eclectic array of family and friends. Most were scientists, artists, and writers, even statesmen: Francis Crick, Antonio Damasio, Jane Goodall, W. H. Auden, Susan Sontag, Stephen Jay Gould, Björk, and his first cousin, Abba Eban. But many of the most eloquent letters in this collection are addressed to the ordinary people who wrote to him with their odd symptoms and questions, to whom he responds with a sense of generosity and wonder.
With some correspondents, Sacks shares his struggle for recognition and acceptance both as a physician and as a gay man, providing intimate accounts as well of his passions for competitive weightlifting, motorcycles, botany, and music. With others, he chronicles his penchant for testing the boundaries of authority, the discovery of his writer’s voice, and his explosive seasons of discovery with the patients who populate his book Awakenings.
Sensitively selected and introduced by Kate Edgar, Sacks’s longtime editor, the letters trace the arc of a remarkable life and reveal an often surprising portrait of Sacks as he wrestles with the workings of his own brain and mind.
'In addition to possessing the technical skills of a twentieth-century doctor, [Sacks] sees the human condition like a philosopher-poet' New York Times
Advance Praise
'Here is the unedited Oliver Sacks—struggling, passionate, a furiously intelligent misfit. And also endless interesting. He was a man like no other' Atul Gawande, author of Being Mortal
'Here is Oliver Sacks annealed. All his largehearted curiosity, all his childlike wonder at how everything coheres, all the self-doubt trembling beneath his brilliance, come alive on these pages. One is left magnified just by bearing witness to this vast and solitary mind, searching for connection and discovering himself' Maria Popova, author of Figuring
'Oliver Sacks’s letters are superb—fluent, brilliant, candid, intimate—and some of them are deliriously passionate. Oliver could write a multi-page love letter as well as a lengthy analysis of a drug state or a neurological condition. Taken together, over more than fifty years, they constitute an autobiography in epistolary form' Paul Theroux, author of The Mosquito Coast and Burma Sahib
'Be prepared to discover a world of human treasures in the letters of Oliver Sacks . . . One marvel here is that Sacks’ literary genius manages to reveal both sides of a conversation, although we are only made privy to his perspective on the issues' Antonio Damasio, author of Feeling and Knowing
Available Editions
EDITION | Other Format |
ISBN | 9781509821839 |
PRICE | £30.00 (GBP) |
PAGES | 752 |
Available on NetGalley
Featured Reviews
Oliver Sacks was one of the most interesting human beings who has walked the Earth, and these letters show his humanity, his struggles, his extraordinary life, deep interests with wonderful care.
Congratulations to the editors. Editing this vast richness of correspondence must be a challenging and rewarding task.
Sacks was a human of magnitudes and his approach to life and self-discovery were honest and authentic, as well as humorous.
We learn about Sacks' travels, his family life and foundation years, and later his practice, hobbies, depression and addictions.
This was a highly thought-provoking, inspiring and well-edited book of letters.