Rating: ****
Tags: Biography & Autobiography, Personal Memoirs, Psychology, Cognitive Psychology, Science, Life Sciences, Neuroscience, Personal Growth, Memory Improvement, Self-Help, Lang:en
Publisher: Penguin Press
Added: March 30, 2018
Modified: November 5, 2021
Summary
Foer's unlikely journey from chronically forgetful science
journalist to U.S. Memory Champion frames a revelatory
exploration of the vast, hidden impact of memory on every
aspect of our lives. On average, people squander forty days
annually compensating for things they've forgotten. Joshua
Foer used to be one of those people. But after a year of
memory training, he found himself in the finals of the U.S.
Memory Championship. Even more important, Foer found a vital
truth we too often forget: In every way that matters, we are
the sum of our memories. Moonwalking with Einstein draws on
cutting-edge research, a surprising cultural history of
memory, and venerable tricks of the mentalist's trade to
transform our understanding of human remembering. Under the
tutelage of top "mental athletes," he learns ancient
techniques once employed by Cicero to memorize his speeches
and by Medieval scholars to memorize entire books. Using
methods that have been largely forgotten, Foer discovers that
we can all dramatically improve our memories. Immersing
himself obsessively in a quirky subculture of competitive
memorizers, Foer learns to apply techniques that call on
imagination as much as determination-showing that
memorization can be anything but rote. From the PAO system,
which converts numbers into lurid images, to the memory
palace, in which memories are stored in the rooms of
imaginary structures, Foer's experience shows that the World
Memory Championships are less a test of memory than of
perseverance and creativity. Foer takes his inquiry well
beyond the arena of mental athletes-across the country and
deep into his own mind. In San Diego, he meets an affable old
man with one of the most severe case of amnesia on record,
where he learns that memory is at once more elusive and more
reliable than we might think. In Salt Lake City, he swaps
secrets with a savant who claims to have memorized more than
nine thousand books. At a high school in the South Bronx, he
finds a history teacher using twenty- five-hundred-year-old
memory techniques to give his students an edge in the state
Regents exam. At a time when electronic devices have all but
rendered our individual memories obsolete, Foer's bid to
resurrect the forgotten art of remembering becomes an urgent
quest. Moonwalking with Einstein brings Joshua Foer to the
apex of the U.S. Memory Championship and readers to a
profound appreciation of a gift we all possess but that too
often slips our minds.