“Evocative images, eloquent testimony—a frank and often inspiring exploration of the experience of mental illness.”—Peter D. Kramer, author of Freud: Inventor of the Modern Mind and Listening to Proza
“An old-fashioned novel, in the best sense of that phrase, elegantly wrought, hardheaded, and tenderhearted.”—Michael Chabon on A Company of Three“A first novel that soars.”—The New York Times on Like
An O, The Oprah Magazine Title to Pick Up Now & Oprah.com Book of the WeekA San Francisco Chronicle Recommended Book?Emotionally rich.” ?New York Times?Ambitious, lush and even thrilling.” ?Los An
A Kirkus Reviews Best Book of the Year and Scientific American Book Club selection?Moreno pulls apart the debates on eugenics, abortion, end-of-life decisions, embryonic stem-cell research, reproducti
Pop culture meets cutting-edge science in this one-volume introduction to the history of science and modern biology.?[Weissmann] has emerged in the last three decades as America’s most interesting and
“Every passionate reader lives for that first page of a book that alerts her, straightaway, she’ll be sorry when the book ends. So it is with Michelle Latiolais’ astonishing, sparklingly intelligent n
The Jump Artist is based on the true, and largely unknown, story of renowned photographer Philippe Halsman, a man Adolph Hitler knew by name, who Sigmund Freud wrote about in 1930, and who put Marilyn
"Once again, Gerald Weissmann, with a firm and easy knowledge of everyone who matters from Auden to Zola, bridges the space between science and the humanities, and particularly between medicine and t
“As we turn the page on eight years of cynical science policy in the White House, Science Next is exactly the book we need, with more provocative ideas per ounce than any volume you are likely to read
“Charles Bardes’ meditations on medicine . . . are beautifully—transparently—written, deeply informed . . . and they carry surprise.”—Sven Birkerts, author of Reading Life and The Gutenberg ElegiesWhe
In The Myth of Monogamy, husband and wife David P. Barash (an evolutionary biologist) and Judith Eve Lipton (a psychiatrist), stunned the public by showing how rare monogamy is in nature. Now, in Stra
“Barash . . . brilliantly integrat[es] science, literature, and pop culture into elegant and insightful commentaries on the most interesting and important questions of our time. A delightful read.”—Mi
“The Leper Compound will . . . remain with the reader long after the book has been closed.”—Stuart Dybek, author of I Sailed with MagellanFor Colleen, motherless at seven, isolated from her schizophre
?An elaborate tale of family and the paths people take to understanding.” ?Seattle Times?[This] mix of well-researched history and contemporary fiction makes for a fine, sad read.” ?Minneapolis Star T
?Profound . . . with more to say on the human condition than most full books. . . . A remarkable collection, with pitch-perfect leaps of imagination.” ?Minneapolis Star Tribune?Horvath seems to be cha