Biography & Autobiography Science & Technology
Possessing Genius
The Bizarre Odyssey Of Einsteins Brain
- Publisher
- Penguin Group Canada
- Initial publish date
- Oct 2002
- Category
- Science & Technology, Study & Teaching, History
-
Paperback / softback
- ISBN
- 9780140293685
- Publish Date
- Oct 2002
- List Price
- $26.00
Classroom Resources
Where to buy it
Description
April 18, 1955, was an auspicious day for Thomas Stoltz Harvey. As chief pathologist at Princeton Hospital, he had been called to do an autopsy on a corpse seven hours old. It was a routine procedure with one significant difference: This was the cadaver of Albert Einstein.
Harvey saw, in Einstein's corpse, a chance to do something "noble,"to contribute in some way to the annals of science. So before he stitched the body shut, Thomas Harvey removed the brain of the twentieth century's greatest intellectual hero. He took it without permission, but struck a deal with Einstein's family to keep it, becoming the custodian of this remarkable relic—preserving it for posterity and the scientists he deemed worthy to study it. He promised to guard the brain from souvenir hunters and publicity seekers and vowed that any information about it would appear only in serious scientific journals. He had no idea that the power of Einstein's celebrity would engulf the rest of his life.
Possessing Genius tells the story of a man obsessed by his conviction that a collection of brain tissue might some day solve the mystery of genius. Painstakingly researched, it includes never-before-published correspondence between Harvey and the executor of Einstein's estate that sheds new light on how the brain fell into one man's hands. It dramatically evokes the shift from scientists' morbid curiosity about an amazing specimen to the serious questions and hypotheses inspired by the existence of the organ, including the widely touted work on Einstein's brain by Canadian neuropsychologist Sandra Witelson.
Possessing Genius won the Canadian Science Writers' Association's 2001 Science in Society Book Award and has been nominated for the 2002 Governor General's Award for Nonfiction.
About the author
Contributor Notes
CAROLYN ABRAHAM began her career at The Ottawa Citizen and Southam News. Now the medical reporter for The Globe and Mail, she first broke the story of how Albert Einstein's brain had come to Canada. This was the basis for her book Possessing Genius: The Bizarre Odyssey of Einstein's Brain. She has twice received a national award from the Canadian Daily Newspapers Association for investigative journalism, and is a winner of the Canadian Science Writers Association Science in Society Award for her reporting on the business of genetics. Carolyn Abraham lives in Toronto with her husband.