
Patient H. M.
A Story of Memory, Madness, and Family Secrets
Обзор книги Patient H. M.
The shocking tale of Henry Molaison, whose lobotomy unlocked neuroscience's greatest secrets. Written by the grandson of the surgeon who removed Henry's hippocampus, this haunting exploration reveals how one man's tragedy revolutionized our understanding of memory while exposing disturbing medical ethics.
Ключевые темы в Patient H. M.
- memory formation
- psychosurgery history
- medical ethics
- anterograde amnesia
- neuroscience case study
Цитаты из Patient H. M.
Abstain from doing harm.
The operation that would forever change both his life and our understanding of memory.
Персонажи в Patient H. M.
- Henry MolaisonThe patient known as H.M. with profound amnesia
- Luke DittrichThe author and grandson of Henry's surgeon
- Dr. William ScovilleThe neurosurgeon who performed the surgery on H.M.
- Walter FreemanA neurologist and major proponent of lobotomies
- Arline HallisseyHenry's childhood crush from St. Peter's School
Об авторе
Об авторе книги Patient H. M.
Luke Dittrich, National Magazine Award-winning journalist and author of the New York Times bestseller Patient H.M.: A Story of Memory, Madness, and Family Secrets, combines investigative rigor with personal history in his groundbreaking exploration of neuroscience and medical ethics.
The book, a genre-blending work of narrative nonfiction, examines themes of memory, identity, and the moral complexities of scientific progress through the case of Henry Molaison—the amnesic patient studied for decades after a lobotomy performed by Dittrich’s own grandfather, renowned neurosurgeon William Beecher Scoville.
A contributing editor at Esquire, Dittrich’s award-winning journalism has appeared in The Best American Crime Writing, The Best American Science and Nature Writing, and major outlets like The New York Times Magazine. His PBS NewsHour interview on Patient H.M. sparked widespread discourse on medical ethics, while his National Magazine Award for feature writing underscores his narrative prowess.
Patient H.M., translated into multiple languages, remains a pivotal work in contemporary science writing and was shortlisted for the PEN/E.O. Wilson Literary Science Writing Award.
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Часто задаваемые вопросы об этой книге
Patient H.M. investigates the landmark case of Henry Molaison, an amnesiac whose brain surgery revolutionized memory science, while exposing unethical medical practices and a dark family secret tied to the author’s grandfather, neurosurgeon William Scoville. Blending biography, memoir, and science journalism, it traces neuroscience’s history from lobotomies to modern ethics, revealing how ambition and human experimentation shaped our understanding of the mind.
This book is ideal for readers interested in medical history, neuroscience, or ethics. Fans of narrative nonfiction like The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks will appreciate its blend of personal and scientific storytelling. Critics praise its accessibility for laypersons and its depth for professionals examining the morality of human experimentation.
Yes. Critics describe it as "haunting," "spellbinding," and "deeply reported," though some note its digressive style. It won acclaim for humanizing Henry Molaison and critiquing scientific hubris, making it essential for understanding memory science’s ethical complexities.
In 1953, William Scoville removed Henry’s medial temporal lobes to treat epilepsy, erasing his ability to form new memories. This accidental experiment revealed the hippocampus’s role in memory, transforming neuroscience but raising enduring ethical questions about informed consent.
Henry’s amnesia helped scientists distinguish between conscious (declarative) and subconscious (procedural) memory. His case proved the hippocampus’s critical role in memory formation, though his lifelong exploitation as a research subject underscores science’s moral ambiguities.
The book condemns unchecked medical experimentation, highlighting Henry’s lack of consent and the destruction of his brain records. It critiques Scoville’s reckless psychosurgeries and institutions that prioritized discovery over patient dignity, paralleling atrocities like Nazi human trials.
Dittrich uncovers that his grandmother, Scoville’s wife, was institutionalized and subjected to invasive therapies, including insulin shock treatment. This personal connection adds emotional depth to his critique of psychiatry’s historical abuses.
Both books examine marginalized individuals exploited for scientific progress. While Skloot focuses on race and bioethics, Dittrich emphasizes neuroscience’s dark past and the personal legacy of his grandfather’s actions, offering complementary critiques of medical morality.
Some reviewers argue the narrative feels overstuffed, blending memoir, history, and science unevenly. The New York Times notes its “paradoxical” mix of engrossing storytelling and occasional carelessness in contextualizing historical events.
Henry’s case remains foundational in neuroscience and ethics discussions. The book’s themes—medical consent, memory’s fragility, and familial legacy—resonate in debates about AI, genetic engineering, and modern human trials.
Sheri Fink calls it “fascinating and disturbing,” revealing “the wondrous and devastating things that happen when hubris, ambition, and human imperfection collide.” Dittrich himself reflects: “Memory is the thread we hang ourselves on.”
It spans ancient Egyptian trepanation to 21st-century MIT labs, contextualizing Scoville’s work within neuroscience’s broader evolution. This sweep highlights recurring ethical failures while celebrating scientific breakthroughs born from human suffering.

















