Authors: Ira B. Black
ISBN-13: 9780071362085, ISBN-10: 0071362088
Format: Hardcover
Publisher: McGraw-Hill Professional
Date Published: October 2000
Edition: (Non-applicable)
In The Dying of Enoch Wallace, neuroscientist Ira Black tells the story of modern neuroscience, drawing us into the world of discovery and scientists, with all their color, idiosyncrasies, and genius. A tale spanning a century and multiple continents, it moves from fascist Italy, with the discovery of neuronal growth factor (NGF) by a young scientist working in a secret, makeshift laboratory in her bedroom, and progresses to current experiments in which transplanted, laboratory-grown cells lead to recovery of function in damaged brain regions. To bridge the gap between abstract concepts and real-world experience, Dr. Black draws upon his work as a clinical neurologist to provide a second dramatic account - the fictionalized story of a successful investment banker's battle with Alzheimer's disease - that vividly complements the main narrative. From his first fleeting memory lapses to his final descent into dementia, each fateful step in Enoch's tragic decline becomes a window onto another aspect of brain function and the latest groundbreaking neuroscientific research.
Black, a prominent neuroscientist and clinical neurologist (Robert Wood Johnson Medical Sch. and Rutgers Univ.), chronicles a half-century of discoveries that have revolutionized the approach to neuropsychiatric disease. Foremost among the principal players in this unfolding drama is Rita Levi-Montalcini, who, 50 years ago, identified a hormone that promoted neuronal growth outside the brain. The subsequent search to define how this nerve growth factor functions in the nervous system led to the realization that many growth and survival factors operate within the brain and the peripheral nervous system. Perhaps even more dramatic was the discovery that, contrary to former belief, neurons can be produced in the adult brain. These and related discoveries have forced a reevaluation of brain function and treatment. To illuminate this unfolding research in more practical human terms, Black offers the story of Enoch Wallace, a fictionalized character whose downward spiral into the grips of Alzheimer's disease is told with remarkable sensitivity. Reminiscent of Ian Robertson's Mind Sculpture (LJ 6/15/00), this book describes a mind that literally can grow and change as it interacts with the environment. An extremely gifted writer, Black has produced an account that should have enormous appeal among educated readers in all libraries.--Laurie Bartolini, Illinois State Lib., Springfield Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.