Lost and Found
On sale
7th February 2019
Price: £10.99
NOW A BBC RADIO 4 FIVE-PART DOCUMENTARY
‘Exquisite . . . a book for anyone with a loved one with dementia. In Montague’s hands this landscape is rendered more bearable.’ Irish Times
‘A profoundly moving book . . . Jules Montague is writing about what it is to be human and the surprising fragility of our sense of self.’ Daily Mail
Who do you become when your mind misbehaves?
Neurologist Dr Jules Montague blends stories of her patients experiencing dementia, brain injury and other neurological disorder with profound insights on what makes us who we are. At once poignant and consoling, this revelatory book explores how we lose ourselves and those around us – and how we can be found again.
Lost and Found is a fascinating and timely examination of what happens to the person left behind when memories disappear, personality changes, and consciousness is disrupted.
‘Exquisite . . . a book for anyone with a loved one with dementia. In Montague’s hands this landscape is rendered more bearable.’ Irish Times
‘A profoundly moving book . . . Jules Montague is writing about what it is to be human and the surprising fragility of our sense of self.’ Daily Mail
Who do you become when your mind misbehaves?
Neurologist Dr Jules Montague blends stories of her patients experiencing dementia, brain injury and other neurological disorder with profound insights on what makes us who we are. At once poignant and consoling, this revelatory book explores how we lose ourselves and those around us – and how we can be found again.
Lost and Found is a fascinating and timely examination of what happens to the person left behind when memories disappear, personality changes, and consciousness is disrupted.
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Reviews
This is a book for anyone wanting to understand the human brain and personhood; it is a book for anyone with a loved one with dementia and for those of us who fear dementia . . . Montague takes the reader on an exquisite journey into the human brain and beyond that, to the metaphysics of personhood . . . Occasionally we come across a physicist or economist who, despite their subject matter, can stop you in your tracks. They reel you in without you realising. Montague is a neurologist who does exactly that. She has a rare gift: she makes her craft look simple . . . Throughout this book Montague displays a maturity and wisdom not always observed in clinicians or indeed any other kind of human.
A profoundly moving, revelatory book... Like the late Oliver Sacks, Jules Montague writes about bizarre cases. ...And yet, she is also writing about what it is to be human and the surprising fragility of our sense of self.'
Beautifully written . . . a great book.
Mind-blowing . . . riveting.