The book is subtitled An Extraordinary Journey Through the World’s Strangest Brains and it consists of nine case studies of people who suffer from some of the rarest mental conditions that modern science knows about. In her thoughtful and compelling introduction and conclusion, Thomson does a great job not only of discussing the kinds of anomalies contained within the book; she also makes wider points about all of us, about the differences and similarities in our brains and minds, about what constitutes ‘normal’, and about how these rare disorders can actually make us think seriously about who we are as human beings.
this is not a clinical exercise in diagnosis, but rather a personal, holistic attempt to really get to know the people she’s writing about
This sort of writing landscape will be familiar to the legions of fans of the late Oliver Sacks, and Thomson acknowledges him as a major influence and inspiration at the start of the book. But she also clearly delineates what makes Unthinkable different – this is not a clinical exercise in diagnosis, but rather a more personal and holistic attempt to really get to know the people she’s writing about, and she brings all of her journalistic skills to the fore in doing just that.
And what amazing people they are. There’s Matar who genuinely feels himself turning into a tiger, Bob who never forgets a single thing and Ruben who sees auras. Then there’s Graham, who suffered for a number of years from the rare Cotard’s syndrome, where he was convinced he was dead, to the point of wandering around graveyards to be closer to others like him.
The focus of each chapter is the person suffering the unusual condition, but Thomson brings intellectual rigour to each subject, discussing history, causes, treatments and more, in what amounts to an utterly fascinating romp around the nether regions of the human mind.
Similarly smart is Dreams Must Explain Themselves by Ursula K. Le Guin, the acclaimed science fiction writers who sadly passed away recently. Dreams Must Explain Themselves is a collection of her non-fiction writings from 1972-2004, including essays, speeches, reviews and general thoughts about all aspects of life.
Le Guin is great at taking her own experiences and placing them in a wider context
Unsurprisingly, given her groundbreaking fiction, this collection exposes Le Guin’s constantly whip-smart intellect, her wide-ranging interests and a treatment of her varied subject matter that is at different times both deeply profound and enjoyably playful. Several of the pieces here deal with the slippery subject of her writing practise, and Le Guin is great at taking her own experiences and placing them in a wider context. There is also a fair amount of perceptive insight about gender here, again, no surprise given the fluid nature of gender in her fiction, and the fact she was a women writing in a genre then dominated by men.
Whether she’s writing about Star Wars or Borges, about the nature of beauty or heroes or princesses or utopias, the picture painted is of an endlessly engaged and inquisitive mind, and a restless intelligence that it is a joy to spend time with.
Unthinkable by Helen Thomson (John Murray, £20)
Dreams Must Explain Themselves by Ursula K. Le Guin (Gollancz, £18.99)