<b>Ramachandran is a latter-day Marco Polo</b>
- Richard Dawkins,
<b>A profoundly intriguing and compelling guide to the intricacies of the human brain</b>.
- Oliver Sachs,
<b>Excellent </b>... I cannot imagine a better account of the sweep of contemporary neuroscience
Financial Times
<b>A leader in his field</b> and an ingenious and tireless researcher. <b>This is the best book of its kind</b> that I have come across
New York Review of Books
<b>A masterpiece. The best of its kind and beautifully crafted</b>.
- Allan Snyder, FRS, Director of the Centre for the Mind,
<p><b>Ramachandran is the modern wizard of neuroscience... here we see the genius at work.</b></p>
- Norman Doidge, author of The Brain That Changes Itself,
<b>An astonishing book.</b> His humanity, humour and scientific genius inform every passage.
- Nicholas Humphrey,
John, aged sixty, suffered a stroke and recovered fully, except in one respect: although he can see perfectly, he can no longer recognise faces, even his own reflection in a mirror.
Whenever Francesca touches a particular texture, she experiences a vivid emotion: denim = extreme sadness; wax = embarrassment; orange peel = shock.
Jimmie, whose left arm was recently amputated, can still feel it - and it's itchy.
Our brains are the most enchanting and complex things in the known universe - but what happens when they go wrong? Dr V. S. Ramachandran, 'the Sherlock Holmes of brain science' and one of the world's leading neuroscientists, has spent a lifetime working with patients who suffer from rare and baffling brain conditions. In The Tell-Tale Brain, he tells their stories, and explores what they reveal about the greatest mystery of them all: how our minds work, and what makes each of us so uniquely human.
John, aged sixty, suffered a stroke and recovered fully, except in one respect: although he can see perfectly, he can no longer recognise faces, even his own reflection in a mirror.
Whenever Francesca touches a particular texture, she experiences a vivid emotion: denim = extreme sadness;