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Published: 2nd March 2022
Paperback
Published: 7th June 2023
Hardback
Published: 2nd March 2022
The Man Who Tasted Words: Inside the Strange and Startling World of Our Senses
By (Author) Dr Guy Leschziner
Simon & Schuster Ltd
Simon & Schuster Ltd
2nd March 2022
3rd February 2022
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
152.1
Hardback
336
Width 153mm, Height 234mm, Spine 25mm
From the opening paragraph, I was spellbound, entranced. Through real stories about what happens when our fragile perception of the world around us and within us is severed, Guy Leschziner connects us back to our senses.
Professor Alice Roberts
Where are you now
Look around you; what can you see
Close your eyes and think of a loved one do you see their face
Stretch out a hand; what can you feel with your fingertips, your palm, the soft underside of your wrist
What can you hear nearby and far away
The information you receive from your senses makes up your world. But that world does not exist. What we perceive to be the absolute truth of the world around us is a complex reconstruction, a virtual reality created by the complex machinations of our minds in tandem with the wiring of our nervous systems.
But what happens if that wiring goes awry What happens if connections falter, or new and unexpected connections are made Tiny shifts in the microbiology of our nervous systems can cause the world around us to shift and mutate, to become alien and unfamiliar.
In The Man Who Tasted Words, consultant neurologist Guy Leschziner takes us on a journey through the senses, exploring how each one shapes our experience of the world. And investigating what happens when they deviate from the norm. Along the way we meet a number of extraordinary individuals and step through the looking glass and into their worlds. Worlds where hot and cold are reversed, where a person with no sight sees fantastical visions, or where words have a taste and sounds create sensations.
But while fascinating, their experiences are more than simply curiosities. They teach us about our own perception of the world, forcing us to question the idea of normal senses, and whether such a thing even exists. Does blue look the same to you and me Does grass smell the same Or sugar taste as sweet Do we even have the same understanding of what sweet is
The Man Who Tasted Words unpacks the science behind your senses and challenges you to try and see the world through anothers eyes and ears, and nose and mouth. It will illuminate, it will surprise, and it will leave your world just a little bit changed.
A truly astonishing book from the story of the man who tasted words to that of Paul who could pull out his own teeth and break his legs yet feel no pain. These are beautifully and engagingly written stories of how our senses tell us about the reality of the world or, sometimes, dont.
Gavin Esler, author of How Britain Ends
Stories of people who experience the world differently show us what it means to be human. This is a deeply moving and powerful book, full of provocative ideas about human perception and the way we construct reality.
Daniel M. Davis, author ofThe Secret BodyandThe Beautiful Cure
This is a book vibrant with personality and full of wonder. Professor Leschziner takes us through an exploration of our senses, making us question the nature of our reality and how we interpret the world around us. It is a profound, entertaining and quite exceptional book.
Dr Alastair Santhouse, Psychiatrist and Author of Head First
In vivid stories of patient maladies that affect our very humansensations ofsight,sound, smell,touch andpain, Leschziner has deeply explored the sensory experiencesthat bombard every moment of our lives but of which we are barely aware.What a terrific melding of brain science with thoughtful ideas on our window to the outside world.
Allan Ropper, author ofReaching Down the Rabbit Hole andHow the Brain Lost its Mind.
A fascinating, important and disturbing book. Words will never taste the same again!
John Humphrys
From the opening paragraph, I was spellbound, entranced. Through real stories about what happens when our fragile perception of the world around us and within us is severed, Guy Leschziner connects us back to our senses. -- Professor Alice Roberts
A truly astonishing book from the story of the man who tasted words to that of Paul who could pull out his own teeth and break his legs yet feel no pain. These are beautifully and engagingly written stories of how our senses tell us about the reality of the world or, sometimes, dont.
-- Gavin Esler, author of How Britain Ends
Stories of people who experience the world differently show us what it means to be human. This is a deeply moving and powerful book, full of provocative ideas about human perception and the way we construct reality. -- Daniel M. Davis, author of The Secret Body and The Beautiful Cure
This is a book vibrant with personality and full of wonder. Professor Leschziner takes us through an exploration of our senses, making us question the nature of our reality and how we interpret the world around us. It is a profound, entertaining and quite exceptional book. -- Dr Alastair Santhouse, Psychiatrist and Author of Head First
In vivid stories of patient maladies that affect our very humansensations ofsight,sound, smell,touch andpain, Leschziner has deeply explored the sensory experiencesthat bombard every moment of our lives but of which we are barely aware.What a terrific melding of brain science with thoughtful ideas on our window to the outside world. -- Allan Ropper, author of Reaching Down the Rabbit Hole and How the Brain Lost its Mind.
A fascinating, important and disturbing book. Words will never taste the same again! -- John Humphrys
Prof Guy Leschzineris a neurologist at Guys and St Thomas Hospitals, where he leads the internationally renowned Sleep Disorders Centre,one of the largest sleep services in Europe, and is Professor of Neurology and Sleep Medicine at Kings College London. Alongside his clinical work, he is the presenter of twoseries on clinical neuroscience on BBC Radio 4 and BBC World Service -Mysteries of Sleep and The Senses - and author of The Nocturnal Brain: Nightmares, Neuroscience and The Secret World of Sleep. He is alsoeditor of the forthcomingOxford Specialist Handbook of Sleep Medicine(OUP), and is neurology section editor forPrinciples and Practice of Sleep Medicine(Elsevier).