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Sandra Blakeslee
Sandra (aka Sandy) Blakeslee. I am a science writer with endless curiosity and interests but have spent the past 25 years or so writing about the brain, mostly for the New York Times where I started my career back in the dark ages (late 60s.) I've been writing books for the past few years (The... show more



Sandra (aka Sandy) Blakeslee. I am a science writer with endless curiosity and interests but have spent the past 25 years or so writing about the brain, mostly for the New York Times where I started my career back in the dark ages (late 60s.) I've been writing books for the past few years (The Body Has a Mind of It's Own and Sleights of Mind are highly recommended, at least by me) but am also getting back to daily journalism (in 2011) despite the demise of MSM. So much is happening! It's a great time to be a science writer. As for back story -- I graduated from Berkeley in 1965 (Free Speech Movement major), went to Peace Corps in Borneo, joined the NYT in 1968 as a staff writer, then took off on my own, raised a family, lived in many parts of the world, now live in Santa Fe NM and even have grandchildren. To quote Churchill, so much to do....

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Seriously, Read a Book!
Seriously, Read a Book! rated it 13 years ago
I have read and/or listened to this book at least four times (one of which was while I was studying neurobiology), and it never ceases to completely captivate me.
simmo
simmo rated it 14 years ago
Fascinating stuff. Ramachandran explores the relatively new field of neuroscience, through speculation, hypothesises and some fairly low-tech experimentation – conjuring an image of a brain that perceives reality through complex pathways which can warp reality in strange ways when damaged, revealing...
Bookivorous
Bookivorous rated it 15 years ago
The experiments Ramachandran designed to investigate the phantom limb phenomenon (experienced by some people following an amputation) are ingenious and elegant and can fairly be said to have advanced our understanding of how proprioception (our awareness of our body in space) is organised in the hum...
Bettie's Books
Bettie's Books rated it 17 years ago
Paperback: 384 pagesPublisher: Fourth Estate; New Ed edition (6 May 1999)Language EnglishISBN-10: 1857028953ISBN-13: 978-1857028959Wow! what a gem of a book - recommended to me by and cram packed with interesting 'stuff' and headology of myriad ilks. The brain is such an interesting landscape where...
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