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Wise Young
11-17-2008, 09:26 AM
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http://www.michaelpaulmason.com/head-cases.php
Michael Paul Mason

head cases: stories of brain injury and its aftermath

Head Cases takes us into the dark side of the brain in an astonishing sequence of stories, at once true and strange, from the world of brain injury. Michael Paul Mason is one of an elite group of experts who appears in the wake of tragic accidents and coordinates care that can last a lifetime. On the road with Mason, we encounter survivors of brain injuries as they struggle to map and make sense of the new worlds they inhabit. We meet a snowboarder whose life became permanently surreal after an errant jump; an "ultraviolent" child who has lost the brain's instinctive check on the impulse to strike out at others; a young man who cannot cry; and an Iraqwar veteran whose odd maladies suggest that brain injury will be the war's most conspicuous legacy.

Underlying each of their stories is an exploration into the brain and its mysteries. When injured, the brain must figure out how to heal itself, reorganizing its physiology in order to do the job, and Mason gives us a series of vivid glimpses into brain science, the last frontier of medicine. We come away in awe of the miracles of the brain's workings and astonished at the fragility of the brain and the sense of self, life, and order that resides there. Head Cases echoes both Oliver Sacks and Raymond Carver, and is at once illuminating and deeply affecting.

Juke_spin
12-04-2008, 02:29 PM
http://www.michaelpaulmason.com/images/head-cases.jpg
http://www.michaelpaulmason.com/head-cases.php

...an "ultraviolent" child who has lost the brain's instinctive check on the impulse to strike out at others...It would seem this young man grew up, passed on his trait and had it proliferate into a significant segment of the population of people inhabiting the world of A Clockwork Orange.

Alex (http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0000532/): There was me, that is Alex, and my three droogs, that is Pete, Georgie, and Dim, and we sat in the Korova Milkbar trying to make up our rassoodocks what to do with the evening. The Korova milkbar sold milk-plus, milk plus vellocet or synthemesc or drencrom, which is what we were drinking. This would sharpen you up and make you ready for a bit of the old ultra-violence.

Alex (http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0000532/): What we were after now was the old surprise visit. That was a real kick and good for laughs and lashings of the old ultraviolent.

I don't know about the book and it's probably costly but the movie from director Stanley Kubrick is one of my favorites. It brought Malcolm McDowell (http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0000532/) to the notice of generations of movie-goers. I recently saw him in I'll Sleep When I'm Dead, where he played a well-to-do owner of a luxury car dealership who performs an unmotivated rape on a harmless drug dealing young man, provoking the youngster to take his own life. He can play nice guys as well but seems to have a special knack for his sort of role.

arndog
12-13-2008, 10:39 AM
I have read Oliver Sach's "Musicophilia" and other books on the neuroscience of music. Sounds like I will have to check out this book. Was it on your Kindle list?

LaMemChose
12-13-2008, 11:45 AM
Head Cases is next in my literal stack of books to read on the table by my bed. I'm still in the midst of My Stroke of Insight.

brokeneck
12-13-2008, 12:33 PM
I am seeing a doctor in Raleigh,NC for bio-feedback to help retrain my brain's passageways.The doctor and I are very hopeful it will help me to walk again.I walk now with a rollator but have little endurance and coordination.My tbi occurred in Nov 2006II now transfer from my wc to the car for travel.Before ,I traveled in my wc in a van.The human brain heals at its own pace.

LaMemChose
12-16-2008, 09:41 PM
Suggestions for additional brain books? Wise?

Anyone? Buehler?