Dr Jo Marchant is an award-winning science journalist based in London. She has a PhD in genetics and medical microbiology from St Bartholomew's Hospital Medical College in London, and an MSc in Science Communication (with a dissertation in evidence-based medicine) from Imperial College London. She has worked as an editor at New Scientist and at Nature, and her articles have appeared in publications including The Guardian, Wired UK, The Observer Review, New Scientist and Nature. Her radio and TV appearances include BBC Radio 4's Start the Week and Today programmes, CNN and National Geographic. She has lectured around the world. Her book Decoding the Heavens was shortlisted for the 2009 Royal Society Prize for Science Books.
Should be compulsory reading for all young doctors
* * NEW SCIENTIST * *
[Marchant] surveys with grace what we think we know, and what we
would like to know, about the mysterious and troubling relationship
between our minds and our bodies
* * GUARDIAN * *
A revved-up, research-packed explication of the use of mind in
medicine
* * NATURE * *
Turns the mind-body debate on its head
* * TIMES LITERARY SUPPLEMENT * *
A well-researched page-turner . . . may very well lead to
widespread changes in the ways we practice medicine
* * NEW YORK POST * *
A diligent and useful work that makes the case for 'holistic'
medicine while warning against the snake-oil salesmen who have
annexed that word for profit
* * SUNDAY TIMES * *
This is popular science writing at its very best . . . I would
recommend this book to anybody who has a mind and a body
* * author of DO NO HARM: STORIES OF LIFE, DEATH, AND BRAIN SURGERY
* *
Marchant is a skeptical, evidence-based reporter - one with a
background in microbiology, no less - which makes for a fascinating
juxtaposition against some of the alternative treatments she
discusses
* * NEW YORK MAGAZINE * *
A thought-provoking exploration of how the mind affects the body
and can be harnessed to help treat physical illness, by an
award-winning science journalist
* * ECONOMIST, Book of the Year * *
A rewarding read that seeks to separate the wishful and
emotion-driven from the scientifically tested
* * WASHINGTON POST * *
Marchant writes this with sparkling clarity and authority . . .
much food for thought
* * NUDGE * *
This is an important book, and one that will challenge those
dismissive of efforts to investigate how our thoughts, emotions and
beliefs might directly influence our physical wellbeing . . .
intriguing and trailblazing
* * SYDNEY MORNING HERALD * *
A powerful and critically needed conceptual bridge for those who
are frustrated with pseudoscientific explanations of alternative
therapies but intrigued by the mind's potential power to both cause
and treat chronic, stress-related conditions
* * PUBLISHERS WEEKLY * *
Cure represents a journey in the best sense of the word: a vivid,
compassionate, generous exploration of the role of the human mind
in both health and illness
*DEBORAH BLUM*
Optimistic . . . [and] empowering
* * MAIL ON SUNDAY * *
Marchant makes her case so cogently that it is hard to disagree
* * INDEPENDENT * *
Thought-provoking . . . Ms Marchant's book makes a convincing
case
* * ECONOMIST * *
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