Called the "poet laureate of medicine" by The New York Times, Sacks is the author of thirteen books, including The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat, Musicophilia, and Awakenings, which inspired an Oscar-nominated film and a play by Harold Pinter. Born in London in 1933, he moved to New York City in 1965, where he launched his medical career and began writing case studies of his patients. About the Author: Oliver Sacks was a neurologist, writer, and professor of medicine. Thomas in The New York Times Book Review, "Oliver Sacks also loves the oceanic kind of islands." Both kinds figure movingly in this book-part travelogue, part autobiography, part medical mystery story-in which Sacks's journeys to a tiny Pacific atoll and the island of Guam become explorations of the meaning of islands, the genesis of disease, the wonders of botany, the nature of deep geological time, and the complexities of being human. "An explorer of that most wondrous of islands, the human brain," writes D.M.
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