Thursday 9 February 2012

The Island of the Colour Blind by Oliver Sacks

There are actually three short books in one volume here. The Island of the Colour Blind focuses on the tiny Pacific atoll of Pingelap, where a very high number of the residents are totally colour blind. Sacks is a neurologist and visits the atoll to investigate the condition, try to work out what is causing it and helping people to overcome the worst effects of the condition. The worst effect for most people is not the lack of colour vision (there are wonderful descriptions here of how people with the condition have a much better visual sense of texture and movement than most people with full colour vision), Much worse is the extreme sensitivity to light and the lack of detailed vision in daylight. While sharing his findings about the condition, Sacks gives us an intimate portrayal of life on the atoll and the sealife surrounding it. It's an incredibly fascinating account.

The middle part of the book is set in Guam, where Sacks looks at the lytico-bodig neurological condition that affects a lot of people on that island. This account is also fascinating, but I sometimes found there was too much medical information for me!

The last part of the book Cycad Island takes us to Rota, an island where Sacks is particularly interested in the cycad trees. He's interested in them for two main reasons, firstly because they are an ancient and long lived type of tree (that Sacks himself grows in his greenhouse at home) and also because there seems to be a connection between the cycad trees and the colour blindness of the people on Pingelap. Cycads are known to be poisonous, yet their seeds are used in food throughout the areas where they grow. The cook has to follow very precise instructions for detoxifying the seeds before they are ready to eat but it seems likely that not all seeds are always fully detoxified. This part of the book is particularly fascinating with a wealth of information about cycads and an interesting exploration of their toxicity.

Overall, this is a compelling read for anyone interested in our relationship with the natural world.

The Island of the Colour Blind and Cycad Island by Oliver Sacks, published by Picador.

I reviewed this book for Brighton Blogger's 2012 Reading Challenge. I also recently reviewed Le Ton Beau de Marot by Douglas Hofstadter.

10 comments:

Carol Steel said...

I am intrigued and will look for this read. Thank you.

Ms Sparrow said...

How interesting! Both my brother and my son have a green-brown color deficiency. I understand that the disorder is passed from mother to son. It's hard to imagine a world without color. Oliver Sacks has written some fascinating books on strange facts about the human brain.

Draffin Bears said...

Hi Juliet,

Many thanks for sharing these books and will see if I can get them from the library.

Happy week
Hugs
Carolyn

The Weaver of Grass said...

Sounds interesting Juliet. My brother was colour blind so it is a subject which interests me greatly.

bunnits said...

Thanks for the information. I have read several books by Sacks, but not familiar with this one. I'll have to check it out.

madhat said...

I ordered this for my husband. I think he will really enjoy it.

Martin said...

I remember enjoying his, 'The Man Who Mistook His Wife For A Hat', some years ago.

Aging Ophelia said...

I read this a few years ago myself, and found it fascinating, as most of Sacks' books are; the ways the people cope, or don't cope, with their atypical gifts makes for a deep, thoughtful read.

RG said...

Is this more of "You are what you eat"? I know lots of people wonder what the youngsters growing up on all this engineered food will be like!

Magyar said...

a rose
in this shade of grey
we search

__I wonder if that "poison seed" after such time, becomes genetic; I
don't know what life would be without the sight of colour or, in fact, without sight. _m