Herbert Fortnightly: On Oliver Sacks
Hun Lee  |  by herbertfortnightly.blogspot.com. All rights reserved. 17.07 | 14:15

I never forget a face, but in your case I'll be glad to make an exception
- Groucho Marx

I m terrible with faces. You hear that a lot, and it sounds like an excuse: someone has forgotten you because they were uninterested last time they met you. But I honestly am.

I can t, at this moment, mentally picture my girlfriend, my parents or anyone else I know. I d recognise them instantly if I saw them, of course, but I know for a fact that other people can conjure a face up in their mind s eye and describe it. As a kid, I d infuriate my parents by asking questions throughout a film: I couldn t follow the plot because I couldn t tell the actors apart.

Cartoons were fine. Even now, I sometimes have trouble with that. I got halfway through before I realised that the two main characters were actually played by different people - I d mistaken Leonardo di Caprio for Matt Damon (still thought it was great, though).


I don t need any sympathy for this: it s a minor inconvenience. But it s occurred to me that maybe other people s parietal and occipital lobes work slightly better than mine. That would tie in with the fact that somebody who had a vastly more intense version of the same problem was the man we know only as Dr P, who had a tumour in the right hemisphere of his brain and who was immortalised by Oliver Sacks as one of the greatest ever book titles, .


I d need three popular science books on my desert island: Dawkins s (which is from before he became obsessed with God), Steven Pinker s , and this one. (I know you re only allowed one book, but I d have to come to some kind of arrangement with Kirsty Young.) It s a collection of case studies - but written in a warmer style than you usually expect from case studies - of some peculiar neurological problems.

It gives you the uncomfortable feeling that you re reading it for the wrong reasons. Sacks writes in the hope that others might learn and understand, and, one day, perhaps be able to cure . But it s a freak show, too.

The man who s believed it was 1945 ever since it really was 1945 is just as weird and wonderful as The Amazing Bearded Lady or The Man Who Eats Metal or whatever. And just as much of a draw: Sacks s book has been made into a successful play and an operetta and has inspired other works of art as well, including - and of course this is the real accolade - an by Travis.
But he achieves his aim, nonetheless.

Maybe you start reading for the same reason you watch a TV programme called When Plastic Surgery Goes Wrong, but you can t help thinking in a different way after you ve come into contact with Sacks s writing. For example, when he visits Dr P, he sees the man s paintings: the early ones realistic and the late ones abstract. He realises that this progression is evidence for the advance of the disablity, but also sees the possibility of artistic merit:
Perhaps, in his cubist period, there might have been both artistic and pathological development, colluding to engender an original form; for as he lost the concrete, so he might have gained in the abstract, developing a greater sensitivity to all the structural elements of line, boundary, contour - an almost Picasso-like power to see, and equally depict, those abstract organisations embedded in, and normally lost in, the concrete
I m not a Picasso fan, but after reading that passage I find it possible to see some strange shapes in faces, which I can t see when I m looking at them as faces.

Try doing it with pictures where the face is upside down or distorted, so that its faceness doesn t jump out so much. Perhaps it s even true that I m better at it than you are. Which wouldn t be as handy as remembering whether I ve met you before, of course.

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Keywords: Oliver Sacks, Man Who, Dr p
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