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Tacking on the Styx: An Epileptic Sails the Facts, Fiction and Philosophy of a Mental Illness (2014)

by Jeffrey L. Hatcher

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As only a patient can, the author brings the social, cognitive, and physical trials of epilepsy to the reader, braiding medical essays with a fictional adventure.
Recently added byTromboneAl, hnau, Jeffrey_Hatcher
  1. 00
    Past Forgetting : My Memory Lost and Found by Jill Robinson (Anonymous user)
    Anonymous user: These titles both focus on dealing with amnesia. Robinson gives a woman's perspective, whereas Hatcher gives a man's. Hatcher tends to be more hard hitting and adult - oriented. Robinson is the more mellow of the two. Hatcher focuses on the culture of the medical community as well, and intermixes fiction with academic - style discussions.… (more)
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Jeffrey Hatcher's Tacking on the Styx is an incredible novel that succeeds on two levels. First, it's a suspenseful story that follows the life of a Mr. Edgar Thomas Meyerhold, a man stricken with epilepsy as a graduate student. Complete with unexpected plot twists and romantic subplots, the tale holds your attention from beginning to end.

Without detracting from the pull of the story, the book also succeeds on another level: It gives the reader an intimate understanding of how it might feel to be an epileptic—it puts you in the mind of the main character. Sidebars within the book give enough technical information to allow the reader to understand the science behind the disease as well as the limitations in our understanding and treatment of this complex illness.

This book would be especially valuable to college students, grad students, and, especially, anyone going into the field of medicine or psychology. Highly recommended.
  TromboneAl | May 4, 2018 |
The book is particularly well written. Covering epilepsy through psychology and biology, and the amnesia that sufferers succumb to.

The book is a cry for more epilepsy research by the authorities. Not just by the syndication of the medical world. But also the need for better training of the psychologist; psychotherapist and counselling community. To become more involved with the treatment of epilepsy. To recognise that it goes beyond the assessment of different types of seizures.
The quality of this work is that it is written from an observer environment, and through the eyes of a sufferer. Hatcher is able to intertwine articles and medical essays with a fictional adventure.
 
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He knew that the woman at his bedside was his mother. What he did not realize immediately was that he
truly did not care. He did not care that she was his mother, nor did he care that she was here with him.
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(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)
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As only a patient can, the author brings the social, cognitive, and physical trials of epilepsy to the reader, braiding medical essays with a fictional adventure.

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This book incorporates a combination of essays on the science, priorities, and practice of medicine with a fictional novella of a young man with epilepsy. It also discusses issues of memory and cognition via mathematics and art. It weaves these various topics into the novella to place the disease into real - life context. 

The particular target audiences are pre-med and medical students and adults who are close to someone with the disease.
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Jeffrey L. Hatcher is a LibraryThing Author, an author who lists their personal library on LibraryThing.

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