#929
Title: The Woman Who Changed Her Brain: And Other Inspiring Stories of Pioneering Brain Transformation
Author: Barbara Arrowsmith-Young
Publisher: Post Hypnotic Press
Year: 2012
288 pages
Narrator: Lisa Bunting
Length: 9 hours, 13 minutes
Free review copy provided by Audiobook Jukebox.
This is a tremendously interesting and hopeful book about brain plasticity, and it's no surprise that Norman Doidge (The Brain That Changes Itself: Stories of Personal Triumph from the Frontiers of Brain Science)
wrote the introduction. Like Doidge, Arrowsmith-Young uses both life
stories and more technical material to tell stories of opportunities to
improve cognitive functioning for people with serious to severe learning
disabilities, brain damage, and other forms of brain-related
disability. Arrowsmith-Young incorporates her own stories throughout the
book. Her descriptions are clear and evocative in the style of the best
of Oliver Sacks's neurological case studies.
Over
the course of the book, the reader learns about the newer and more
hopeful model of plasticity and relearning (or differently learning),
not to accommodate problems so much as to address the deficits that lead
to them. A variety of exemplar stories are included, most about pupils
at Arrowsmith-Young's school. There are intriguing glimpses of the
actual interventions used. I would have enjoyed more technical detail,
but the inclusion of that material may have made the book more difficult
for a non-professional to read, especially in audiobook format. Indeed,
some examples were hard to follow as a listener rather than a print
reader. Lisa Bunting reads clearly and that clarity helped me to follow
examples that would have been easier on the page.
Recommended
for readers who enjoy popular biological science, those who have a
family member with a cognitive deficit (or have one themselves), and
educators. While not a self-help book, it may well stimulate further
exploration and lead a person to new resources.
Sunday, February 17, 2013
Surinam: Stumbling Through the Dark Heart of South America's Forgotten Jungle
#928
Title: Surinam: Stumbling through the Dark Heart of South America's Forgotten Jungle [The Riverbones: Stumbling After Eden in the Jungles of Suriname]
Author: Andrew Westoll
Publisher: Old Street Publishing
Year:2008/2009
Country: Suriname
349 pages
My last country for reading the world. The book was also published as The Riverbones: Stumbling After Eden in the Jungles of Suriname. It doesn't quite meet my 2-year author residency requirement, but I'll follow up with Mark Plotkin, who is featured in absentia here as well.
Mostly but not entirely a quest memoir, this follows Westoll as he hangs around in Surinam experiencing inchoate longings and, in the process of searching for what he's searching for, loses a relationship. Those there is some focus on the okopipi (Dendrobates azureus, blue frog), the purpose is to find meaning and identity, not just the frog. See his website, http://www.andrewwestoll.com/
Title: Surinam: Stumbling through the Dark Heart of South America's Forgotten Jungle [The Riverbones: Stumbling After Eden in the Jungles of Suriname]
Author: Andrew Westoll
Publisher: Old Street Publishing
Year:2008/2009
Country: Suriname
349 pages
My last country for reading the world. The book was also published as The Riverbones: Stumbling After Eden in the Jungles of Suriname. It doesn't quite meet my 2-year author residency requirement, but I'll follow up with Mark Plotkin, who is featured in absentia here as well.
Mostly but not entirely a quest memoir, this follows Westoll as he hangs around in Surinam experiencing inchoate longings and, in the process of searching for what he's searching for, loses a relationship. Those there is some focus on the okopipi (Dendrobates azureus, blue frog), the purpose is to find meaning and identity, not just the frog. See his website, http://www.andrewwestoll.com/
Thursday, December 20, 2012
Swimming in Uncharted Waters: Reports from Cambodia
#927
Title: Swimming in Uncharted Waters: Reports from Cambodia
Author: Gina Wijers
Publisher: AnyPress, The American Book Center
Year: 2009/2011
177 pages
A collection of essays based on letters home (or perhaps simply those letters) from a development worker in Cambodia. The author raises many useful questions and explores pertinent issues. A little more editing would enhance the English edition.
Title: Swimming in Uncharted Waters: Reports from Cambodia
Author: Gina Wijers
Publisher: AnyPress, The American Book Center
Year: 2009/2011
177 pages
A collection of essays based on letters home (or perhaps simply those letters) from a development worker in Cambodia. The author raises many useful questions and explores pertinent issues. A little more editing would enhance the English edition.
Title: Ambassadors Before They Knew It: Song Kosal and Tun Channareth of the Cambodia Campaign to Ban Landmines 1994-2011
#926
Title: Ambassadors Before They Knew It: Song Kosal and Tun Channareth of the Cambodia Campaign to Ban Landmines 1994-2011
Authors: Hannah Cole, Molly Mullen, Tess O'Brien, Denise Coghlan
Publisher: Jesuit Refugee Service
Year: 2011
63 pages
A montage of photos, reports, brief speeches, and other ephemera related to Cambodian activists' work toward establishing a worldwide landmine ban. The collection is well-organized and is moving to read.
Title: Ambassadors Before They Knew It: Song Kosal and Tun Channareth of the Cambodia Campaign to Ban Landmines 1994-2011
Authors: Hannah Cole, Molly Mullen, Tess O'Brien, Denise Coghlan
Publisher: Jesuit Refugee Service
Year: 2011
63 pages
A montage of photos, reports, brief speeches, and other ephemera related to Cambodian activists' work toward establishing a worldwide landmine ban. The collection is well-organized and is moving to read.
The True Meaning of Smekday
#925
Title: The True Meaning of Smekday
Author: Adam Rex
Publisher: Hyperion
Year: 2007/2009
423 pages
A very funny, often arch YA F&SF novel of alien invasion. Rex plays with typical expectations for both content and form, resulting in an enjoyable and sometimes surprising story. I enjoyed the ending, though [highlight for spoiler] it was a little too The Trouble with Tribbles to be completely excellent.
Title: The True Meaning of Smekday
Author: Adam Rex
Publisher: Hyperion
Year: 2007/2009
423 pages
A very funny, often arch YA F&SF novel of alien invasion. Rex plays with typical expectations for both content and form, resulting in an enjoyable and sometimes surprising story. I enjoyed the ending, though [highlight for spoiler] it was a little too The Trouble with Tribbles to be completely excellent.
The Trivia Lover's Guide to the World: Geography for the Lost and Found
#924
Title: The Trivia Lover's Guide to the World: Geography for the Lost and Found
Author: Gary Fuller
Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
Year: 2012
288 pages
Entertaining geography trivia, with related digressions. Since the chapters are short and self-contained, it's a good choice for an airplane, which is where I read it.
Title: The Trivia Lover's Guide to the World: Geography for the Lost and Found
Author: Gary Fuller
Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
Year: 2012
288 pages
Entertaining geography trivia, with related digressions. Since the chapters are short and self-contained, it's a good choice for an airplane, which is where I read it.
Afakasi Woman: A Collection of Short Stories from a "Real Samoan Woman"
#923
Title: Afakasi Woman: A Collection of Short Stories from a "Real Samoan Woman"
Author: Lani Wendt Young
Publisher: Amazon Digital Services
Year: 2012
Country: Samoa
92 pages
A collection of short stories and essays by a Samoan writer. It provides a good look at daily life and tensions.Some are very funny or astute; some portray aspects of culture even though they are not as well-constructed.
Title: Afakasi Woman: A Collection of Short Stories from a "Real Samoan Woman"
Author: Lani Wendt Young
Publisher: Amazon Digital Services
Year: 2012
Country: Samoa
92 pages
A collection of short stories and essays by a Samoan writer. It provides a good look at daily life and tensions.Some are very funny or astute; some portray aspects of culture even though they are not as well-constructed.
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