Författare

Lawrence Weschler

Bästsäljande5 verk2 språk

Lawrence Weschler är en uppskattad författare inom Biografier och Filosofi och religion med totalt 5 böcker tillgängliga på Bokkollen, utgivna hos Farrar, Straus & Giroux Inc, St Martin's Press, Taschen GmbH.

Bland verken finns And How Are You, Dr. Sacks?, som toppar listan över Lawrence Weschlers populäraste böcker. Verken spänner över biografier och tilltalar läsare som uppskattar genren.

Det senast publicerade verket av Lawrence Weschler är And How Are You, Dr. Sacks?, utgivet 2020.

Letar du efter något nytt att läsa? Prova Seeing Is Forgetting the Name of the Thing One Sees – ett annat uppskattat verk av Lawrence Weschler.

På Bokkollen gör vi det enkelt att navigera i Lawrence Weschlers författarskap. Vår databas uppdateras ständigt med nya släpp och format, så oavsett om du söker efter en lättläst pocket för semestern, en lyxig inbunden presentutgåva eller en digital ljudbok för pendlingen, har vi rätt utgåva för dig.

Jämför snabbt och smidigt priser på alla böcker av Lawrence Weschler hos Sveriges ledande bokhandlare – som Adlibris, Bokus och Akademibokhandeln – och hitta alltid det bästa erbjudandet utan att betala för mycket.

And How Are You, Dr. Sacks?
Mest populär

And How Are You, Dr. Sacks?

The author Lawrence Weschler began spending time with Oliver Sacks in the early 1980s, when he set out to profile the neurologist for his own new employer, The New Yorker. Almost a decade earlier, Dr. Sacks had published his masterpiece Awakenings - the account of his long-dormant patients’ miraculous but troubling return to life in a Bronx hospital ward. But the book had hardly been an immediate success, and the rumpled clinician was still largely unknown. Over the ensuing four years, the two men worked closely together until, for wracking personal reasons, Sacks asked Weschler to abandon the profile, a request to which Weschler acceded. The two remained close friends, however, across the next thirty years and then, just as Sacks was dying, he urged Weschler to take up the project once again. This book is the result of that entreaty. Weschler sets Sacks’s brilliant table talk and extravagant personality in vivid relief, casting himself as a beanpole Sancho to Sacks’s capacious Quixote. We see Sacks rowing and ranting and caring deeply; composing the essays that would form The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat; recalling his turbulent drug-fueled younger days; helping his patients and exhausting his friends; and waging intellectual war against a medical and scientific establishment that failed to address his greatest concern: the spontaneous specificity of the individual human soul. And all the while he is pouring out a stream of glorious, ribald, hilarious, and often profound conversation that establishes him as one of the great talkers of the age. Here is the definitive portrait of Sacks as our preeminent romantic scientist, a self-described “clinical ontologist” whose entire practice revolved around the single fundamental question he effectively asked each of his patients: How are you? Which is to say, How do you be? A question which Weschler, with this book, turns back on the good doctor himself.