A British cognitive neuropsychiatrist explores his work helping some of his most troubling patients, from a catatonically depressed young woman to a man who couldn't recognize his own wife.
What The Reviewers Say
Christine Kenneally,
The New York Times Book Review
David’s stories are fascinating, and he does something quite remarkable with his tone. Here the obvious comparison is to the neurologist and prolific writer Oliver Sacks, often described as the poet laureate of medicine. Even when Sacks wrote about tragedy, his narratives were imbued with meaning, and if not positivity, then at least a sad beauty. David appears not to be driven by the same impulses. Even when his case studies have positive endings, a rather thick vein of gray runs through them.
Diane Cole,
The Washington Post
Fans of the medical-mystery television series House will find arresting parallels—and striking differences—in the absorbing collection of real-life psychiatric case histories the distinguished British neuropsychiatrist Anthony David recounts.
Donald F. Calbreath,
New York Journal of Books
Into the Abyss provides a strong argument for the restoration of a balance between physical, emotional, and neurochemical approaches to this complex situation.
Stuart Ritchie,
The Sunday Times (UK)
The first thing that comes across from the stories is David’s obvious compassion for his patients. This is typified not just by his thoughtful medical interventions and the doctor-patient conversations he recounts in vivid detail, but also by his willingness to raise hell with the relevant bureaucrats when pointless rules get in the way of his charges receiving the treatment they need. The second thing, though, is an uncomfortable sense of uncertainty—that abyss again. More than one patient is described as feeling like a human guinea pig as their treatments and medications are shuffled around in (often vain) attempts to pinpoint what might work.