The brain weighs just three and a half pounds, but it governs every aspect of our lives...
AN ECONOMIST BOOK OF THE YEAR
'A fascinating and wide-ranging account of what neurosurgery is really about - the past, present and future.' Henry Marsh, author of Do No Harm
Since its inception in the early twentieth century, brain surgery has maintained an air of mystery. As the saying 'it's not exactly brain surgery' suggests, the specialty has become synonymous with a level of complexity and meticulousness rivalled only by, well, rocket science.
Warm, rigorous and deeply insightful, neurosurgeon Theodore Schwartz reveals what it's really like to get inside someone's head - where every second can mean the difference between life or death. Drawing from Schwartz's experience in one of New York's busiest hospitals, Gray Matters explores the short but storied history of brain surgery. From the dark days of the lobotomy to the latest research into the long-term effects of contact sports on athletes' cerebral health, Schwartz unfolds the fascinating story of how we came to understand this extraordinary, three-pound organ, which not only keeps us alive, but makes us who we are.
'Fascinating... Schwartz's way with words is as skilful as his wielding of microscissors.' Mail on Sunday
ISBN: | 9780861549443 |
Publication date: | 5th September 2024 |
Author: | Theodore H Schwartz |
Publisher: | Oneworld an imprint of Oneworld Publications |
Format: | Hardback |
Pagination: | 512 pages |
Genres: |
Autobiography: science, technology and medicine Rehabilitation: brain and spinal injuries Popular medicine and health: the human body History of medicine Neurology and clinical neurophysiology General surgery Neurosurgery |