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Rating: Summary: A Great Inside Story Review: I was so impressed with the frankness and openess of this book. Handler allows its reader into a world that there are not many doors for those without TS. He helps the reader explore the humor of TS, the complexity of TS and the comradery between Touretters. This book is profoundly honest. It is a must read for those readers interested in Tourette Syndrome.
Rating: Summary: An Honest Heartbreaking Portrayal Review: Lowell Handler has the courage to come straight into the mainstream about one of the most misunderstood neurological disorders presently known. Mr. Handler was also a consultant on the Tourette themed film, "Niagara, Niagara". His experiences are truthfully and painfully explained. One can only wonder which is better; having partial control over one's bodily movements or none at all. Sensitive and accurate, it is a must read for every doctor, parent, social worker, or anyone in this complicated world. It is explained that people with Tourette are absolutely normal, except for this "neurological malfunction". Once you are familiar with it, you will see how common it is in public. It is then that true empathy comes into perspective. This book will change your outlook on the curiosities life places in our path.
Rating: Summary: Excellently Tourettish account of Tourette's Review: Many Touretters will say that Tourette's gives rhythm to not only movement and speech, but thought and life as well. This book, with its energetic, pulsing, and sometimes explosive rhythm, certainly seems to bear that out. The author, who has Tourette's syndrome himself, describes the way Tourette's interplays with and shapes his life, in an integrated way even when he sees it as an interference. He meets people with varying kinds and degrees of Tourette's, along with Oliver Sacks, a famous neurologist who studies people with Tourette's. As a person whose tics are too mild for me to really consider them a part of me, I found it interesting to see what life is like with tics that integrate themselves into every part of a person's life. I noticed parallels between the attitudes of some Touretters toward Tourette's and the attitude of many autistic people toward autism, where there's not as much of a line to be drawn between a condition and a person's personality as a purely medical/disease model would make it sound. This book was both interesting and genuinely enjoyable to read.
Rating: Summary: Excellently Tourettish account of Tourette's Review: Many Touretters will say that Tourette's gives rhythm to not only movement and speech, but thought and life as well. This book, with its energetic, pulsing, and sometimes explosive rhythm, certainly seems to bear that out. The author, who has Tourette's syndrome himself, describes the way Tourette's interplays with and shapes his life, in an integrated way even when he sees it as an interference. He meets people with varying kinds and degrees of Tourette's, along with Oliver Sacks, a famous neurologist who studies people with Tourette's. As a person whose tics are too mild for me to really consider them a part of me, I found it interesting to see what life is like with tics that integrate themselves into every part of a person's life. I noticed parallels between the attitudes of some Touretters toward Tourette's and the attitude of many autistic people toward autism, where there's not as much of a line to be drawn between a condition and a person's personality as a purely medical/disease model would make it sound. This book was both interesting and genuinely enjoyable to read.
Rating: Summary: BRILLIANT.... Review: Taken from the perspective of an author who lives with Tourette's Syndrome, Lowell Handler provides one of the most vivid everyday observances to a most uncontrollable disorder. What most people have little grasp on, Handler often uses humility and humor to set examples of how only one living with this handicap can describe.
Tourette's Syndrome is usually spotted early before the age of eighteen, found to impair males more than females (almost three to one). Tourette's creates involuntary movements and tics that usually cannot be controlled by the person. Vocally, inappropriate language and animal sounds is the most common dysfunction towards the disorder's spontaneous combustion.
Twitch & Shout gives an inspirational account of a man that survives triumphantly, documenting the good and the bad as an author, photographer and moviemaker, on top of personal and love interest. People with Tourette's lead normal and healthy lives, but the journey sometimes is not. Feeling comfortable means comprehending the diagnoses. Handler evokes a great deal of self into the findings of this book.
SIDENOTE
Handler filmed a documentary also called Twitch & Shout before the book was published. This can be found at select local libraries on a VHS format. The video shows some different perspectives that the book cannot illustrate. VERY RECOMMENDED.
Rating: Summary: A Great Inside Story Review: this was a wonderfull book. i loved it.the author makes you feel for him but not pity him. a god read fir anybody intrested in tourettes.
Rating: Summary: Facing life head on and winning Review: Twitch and Shout is a fascinating, moving, and informative account of an artistic young man (the author) who confronts his Tourette Syndrome head on, deliberately living at full tilt in defiance of the much misunderstood disorder. Moments of transcendent prose alternate with hilarious and sometimes sad memoir. As an artist and advocate of mastery, I appreciated how the author's challenges shaped his journey, bringing him numerous triumphs, as photographer, author, friend and lover. With objectivity and grace, he discovered that Tourette informed part of who he was, and acted almost as a language or culture, at times a heightened state. I was moved by this perspective, and aspire to its message, that we should not only accept our rough edges, but see them as the parameters of our genius.
Rating: Summary: The diversity of human beings Review: Twitch and Shout is a treasure of sharing. I love to share Howell's feelings and experience. I'm touched by his sensual touch of every person living with Tourette in his book. I can't forget the pain having a fragile present for a beloved is broken because of a twitch. I can't forget the noise and joy in the wedding. I can't forget the victory when the drug is to continue to manufacture. May the humankind be diverse. We are human beings.
Rating: Summary: A sometimes brutally honest account of living life with TS Review: We read this book aloud (with some judicious editing of the more personal passages) with our 11-year-old son, who developed Tourette Syndrome at age seven. He found a strong identification with the author and was vehement in his praise for the book. It was evident that Handler's honesty helped M. feel he is not alone with this disorder that makes him feel so different from other kids. For this reason alone, I recommend the book to anyone suffering from Tourette Syndrome and their families. I've given it to teachers to help them try to understand what M. feels like inside, and they've found it enlightening.
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