Awakenings (book)


Awakenings is a 1973 book by Oliver Sacks. It recounts the life histories of those who had been victims of the 1920s encephalitis lethargica epidemic. Sacks chronicles his efforts in the late 1960s to help these patients at the Beth Abraham Hospital in the Bronx, New York. The treatment used the new drug L-DOPA, with the observed effects on the patients' symptoms being generally dramatic but temporary.
In 1982, Sacks wrote:
The 1976 edition of the book is dedicated to the memory of Sacks's close friend the poet W. H. Auden, and bears an extract from Auden's 1969 poem The Art of Healing:
Auden himself called Awakenings a masterpiece. In 1974 the book won the Hawthornden Prize.
According to a December 2025 article in the New Yorker, the book was "met with silence or skepticism by other neurologists", and Sacks' findings could not be replicated. Sacks wrote in his private journal that some details of the book were “pure fabrications.” Lawrence Weschler, who was preparing a biography of Sacks, visited the patients described in the book and found "a lot of people shitting in their pants, drooling."

In popular culture

The book inspired a play, two films, a ballet and an opera: