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Rating: Summary: Joseph Carey Merrick - the Man, the Soul Review: 'Tis true my form is something odd but blaming me is blaming God, Could I create myself anew I would not fail in pleasing you.If I could reach from pole to pole or grasp the ocean with a span, I would be measured by the soul - the mind's the standard of the man. I bought this book many years ago, unfortunately I made the mistake of lending it to someone and I never got it back. This is a remarkable book. I was touched by Joseph Merrick years ago. For the past nine years, I have been running the Joseph Carey Merrick Tribute Website. It is a site dedicated to Joseph, the person - not Joseph, the disability. I'm presently heading a London and Leicester (UK) campaign to have a commemorative plaque erected in his honour. He deserves to have a permanent tribute. He has done a great deal to advance medical science, through his skeleton, and thanks to him, there will one day be a cure for Proteus Syndrome. It's time the world said 'thank you'. Please give your moral support by visiting the site. I'm not sure if web addresses can be mentioned here, so simply type the following in your web browser: Joseph Carey Merrick Tribute Website
Rating: Summary: The True History of the Elephant Man Review: I first read the original article on the elephant man Joseph Merrick by Dr Treves in a magazine in the mid 1970s. I then saw the movie in 1980. The movie peaked my interest for further info so I bought the book. The book not only goes into extensive detail of the disease but goes also extensively into Joseph Merrick's life as well as life in the Victorian era as it effected the common man. The imagery of the period was brought out by the writers: the London Hospital, the surrounding area, the showmen and their lives, etc. The research was very detailed, although later after the book's publication we learned of the possibility that Merrick suffered from Proteus and not pneumofibromatosis. This book should be read by anybody interested in these diseases as well as anybody interested in this time period.
Rating: Summary: Soul stirring and heart warming account of a young man Review: I inherited this book from a deceased family member. I had heard about David Lynch's movie about The Elephant Man, but I never saw it. Reading this book made me cry and empathize with Joseph Carey Merrick for his condition and the ostractize he received from the world based on his looks and not his soul. Joseph Carey Merrick was the real Elephant Man not a fictional character. Joseph had a loving mother that died when he was a child and his father moved and remarried. His step-mother didn't like him and scorned him for his looks and his inability to find work due to his lameness, telling him that what she fed him was more than he earned. Eventually he refused to return home for meals because he didn't want to listen to step-mother barate him anymore. His father stopped looking for him, but did get him a hawker's license to hawk wares on the street. But people were afraid of him and would not buy his wares, and he acquired a gathering of curious people around him. His uncle gave him shelter for a while, but Joseph left there too. He worked in the workhouse a place of refuge and work for the poor and destitute for 3 years, but hated it and left. He ended up being exhibited as a sideshow freak under the name of "The Elephant Man" because his congenital deformity made it so that he resemble that of an elephant (or so the posters showed him to resemble). When he was at Whitechapel Road, across the street from the London Hospital Dr. Treves saw him for the first time and brought him to the hospital to examine him. Over the next few years Joseph was exhibited, his managers robbed him of his life savings and left. Joseph went back to Whitechapel Road and to the care of the only friend he knew . . . Dr. Treves. He spent his remaining years under the friendship and care of the staff at the London Hospital. I loved this story. Michael Howell and Peter Ford told a true and compassionate account of Joseph Merrick's life. A man who was like any other human being with hopes and dreams with one setback.. His congenital deformity that prohibited his ability to be like, and experience and sleep lying down on his back like other people. Through all of years and hardships, Joseph was scared, but kind and kept a calm serenity inside himself about his condition. He had so much gratitude for the staff and his new friends who helped him, he made cardboard models and sent these things to those people who saw to his care in his appreciation for their help. The book also includes pictures how Merrick looked when he was admitted to the London Hospital, and a display of his skeleton after death.
Rating: Summary: Undeniably human, Unquestioningly Heroic Review: Since I was a child the story of the Elephant Man has fascinated me; anyone who has ever felt like an outsider, or not part of the "cool crowd," or somehow physically blemished (in my case, adolescent acne, child's play compared with Merrick's condition) can identify with him. This is one of the earliest books dedicated to uncovering the truth about Joseph Carey Merrick (whose name was for some reason changed to John Merrick by Sir Frederick Treves and thus written that way in the play and movie). We learn such obscure things as: who were his parents? what did they do for a living? how old was he when his disease began to manifest itself? what did he do before becoming a sidehow freak? (answer: as a teen he peddled goods door to door and then rolled cigars in a factory before going to the Leicester Union Workhouse). The only inaccurate thing about this book seems to be a chapter entitled "What was wrong with him?" The authors firmly believe it was neurofibromatosis, but in the early '90s medical researchers began to believe that it was really an ultra-rare condition called Proteus syndrome. No matter, however, for this is the least interesting chapter. Concentrate instead on Merrick's inspiring story. I must warn everyone: the book includes many photographs of Merrick's grotesque body, which will upset young children. I would not let anyone under, say, 12, read or look at this book, because they may get nightmares.
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