Book Review: A Molecule Away from Madness by Sara Manning Peskin

By Danielle Szewc

Many of us are affected by degenerative cognitive disease and mental illness, whether it be a family member or a friend. We also know that DNA, proteins, and vitamins are essential to life. However, a single DNA base pair mutation, a misfolded protein, or the lack of a specific vitamin can impair the brain’s natural functions and cause Alzheimer’s and other degenerative cognitive ailments that affect those we care about.

As a reader who has always been deeply fascinated by neurology and molecular biology, Sarah Manning Peskin's A Molecule Away from Madness: Tales of the Hijacked Brain hits the mark on what it set out to be—a narrative that a simple change in or lack of essential molecules can lead to molecular dissonance along with personal and familial struggles.

Peskin, an assistant professor of clinical neurology at the University of Pennsylvania, compellingly writes about the medical and biological factors involved in degenerative cognitive diseases. She divides the book into three distinct areas: mutations in DNA, misfolded or misaligned proteins, and the presence or lack of small molecules such as vitamins and environmental toxins. She relays the history of medicine, and molecular biology in an eloquent fashion while detailing the problems that the doctors and biologists of the time faced while trying to determine the causes of these degenerative diseases, some of whom even faced embarrassment by peers.

A Molecule Away from Madness skillfully and artfully explains scientific processes in an easy-to-understand manner and is an impeccable read for those new to the subject or those who are knowledgeable and would like to know more from a humanized case study perspective. I enjoyed the fast-paced writing style of the woven stories of each disease—outlines from a patient and family perspective which moved into the historical and scientific perspective of discovery, experimentation, and application. Peskin writes in an easy-to-follow manner and has anecdotal humor. Those who have read Oliver Sack’s books are sure to enjoy A Molecule Away from Madness.

 

Thank you, NetGalley and W. W. Norton & Company, for the complimentary copy in exchange for an honest review.