Press enter after choosing selection

Patient H.m. : : a Story of Memory, Madness and Family Secrets

Dittrich, Luke. Book - 2016 616.852 Di, Adult Book / Nonfiction / Social Science / Psychology / Dittrich, Luke 2 On Shelf No requests on this item Community Rating: 4.4 out of 5

Cover image for Patient H.M. : : a story of memory, madness and family secrets

Sign in to request

Locations
Call Number: 616.852 Di, Adult Book / Nonfiction / Social Science / Psychology / Dittrich, Luke
On Shelf At: Downtown Library, Pittsfield Branch

Location & Checkout Length Call Number Checkout Length Item Status
Downtown 2nd Floor
4-week checkout
616.852 Di 4-week checkout On Shelf
Pittsfield Adult Books
4-week checkout
Adult Book / Nonfiction / Social Science / Psychology / Dittrich, Luke 4-week checkout On Shelf

Includes index.
Origins -- The fall -- Crumpled lead and rippled copper -- Dream jobs -- The bridge -- Arline -- Madness -- Pomander walk -- Water, fire, electricity -- Melius anceps remedium quam nullum -- the broken -- Room 2200 -- Sunset Hill -- Experiment successful, but the patient died -- Unlimited access -- Ecphory -- The vacuum and the ice pick -- The hunt -- It was brought into the sea -- Proust on the operating table -- Fortunate misfortunes -- Henry Gustave Molaison (1926-1953) -- Discovery -- Where angels fear to tread -- Monkeys and men -- Interpreting the stars -- The son-of-a-bitch center -- The MIT research project known as the amnesic patient H.M. -- Secret wars -- Dewey defeats Truman -- A sweet, intractable man -- It is necessary to go to Niagara to see Niagara Falls -- Patient H.M. (1953-2008) -- The smell of bone dust -- Every day is alone in itself -- Postmortem.
"In the summer of 1953, a renowned Yale neurosurgeon named William Beecher Scoville performed a novel operation on a 27-year-old epileptic patient named Henry Molaison, drilling two silver-dollar sized holes in his forehead and suctioning out a few teaspoons of tissue from a mysterious region deep inside his brain. The operation helped control Molaison's intractable seizures, but it also did something else: It left Molaison amnesic for the rest of his life, with a short term memory of just thirty seconds. Patient H.M., as he came to be known, would emerge as the most important human research subject in history. Much of what we now know about how memory works is a direct result of the sixty years of near-constant experimentation carried out upon him until his death in 2008. Award-winning journalist Luke Dittrich brings readers from the gleaming laboratory in San Diego where Molaison's disembodied brain -- now the focus of intense scrutiny -- sits today; to the surgical suites of the 1940s and 50s, where doctors wielded the powers of gods; and into the examination rooms where generations of researchers performed endless experiments on a single, essential, oblivious man: H.M. In the process, Dittrich excavates the lives of Dr. Scoville and his most famous patient, and spins their tales together in thrilling, kaleidoscopic fashion, uncovering troves of well-guarded secrets, and revealing how the bright future of modern neuroscience has dark roots in the forgotten history of psychosurgery, raising ethical questions that echo into the present day"--Provided by publisher.

REVIEWS & SUMMARIES

Library Journal Review
Booklist Review
Publishers Weekly Review
Summary / Annotation
Table of Contents
Fiction Profile
Excerpt
Author Notes

COMMUNITY REVIEWS

Nature and History of Memory - a Family Memoir submitted by sdunav on June 11, 2021, 11:35am A disturbing and enlightening memoir, biography, and history of science book, about a neurosurgeon (the author's grandfather), his operations (mostly lobotomies) and his most famous patient: H.M., aka Henry Molaison. Molaison was unable to form long-term memories after his lobotomy, and became hugely important to our modern understanding how brains work and the nature of memory.

Dittrich does not flinch from examining the ethics of the research, the psychological testing, and especially the surgeries done from the 1930's through the late 70's, even looking at horrific Nazi experiments and the resulting Nuremberg trials. His family history adds a detailed, graphic, and occasionally shocking dimension to the narrative.

Cover image for Patient H.M. : : a story of memory, madness and family secrets


PUBLISHED
New York : Random House, 2016.
Year Published: 2016
Description: 440 pages : illustrations ; 25 cm.
Language: English
Format: Book

ISBN/STANDARD NUMBER
9780812992731
0812992733

SUBJECTS
H. M., -- 1926-2008.
Scoville, William Beecher, -- 1906-1984.
Amnesiacs -- Biography.
Epilepsy -- History.
Memory disorders -- Patients.