Date: 2006
"The brain is a mind-boggling redesign. But it can't escape its past. [...] She pictured those mangled Kearney mansions, glorious old wooden Victorians enlarged with brick in the 1930s and again in the 1970s with pressboard and aluminum."
preview | full record— Powers, Richard (b. 1957)
Date: 2006
"The neurologist made the brain sound more rickety than the old toy trucks Mark used to assemble from discarded cabinet parts and sawn-off detergent bottles."
preview | full record— Powers, Richard (b. 1957)
Date: 2006
"The reptile brain, creeping out to sun itself."
preview | full record— Powers, Richard (b. 1957)
Date: 2006
"Mental space is larger than anyone can think."
preview | full record— Powers, Richard (b. 1957)
Date: 2006
"She was there, in Weber's strobing mind, when he stepped into the jetway at La-Guardia, and gone when he found himself, that same afternoon, dead center in the evacuated prairie, with no transition but a jump cut."
preview | full record— Powers, Richard (b. 1957)
Date: 2006
"Weber still saw the rarest of butterflies, fluttering mind, its paired wings pinned to the film in obscene detail."
preview | full record— Powers, Richard (b. 1957)
Date: 2006
"This subsystem still chattered; this one had fallen silent."
preview | full record— Powers, Richard (b. 1957)
Date: 2006
"'What we think of as a single, simple process,' Weber wrote, 'is in fact a long assembly line. Vision requires careful coordination between thirty-two or more separate brain modules. Recognizing a face takes at least two dozen.'"
preview | full record— Powers, Richard (b. 1957)