In their very readable style, the authors take us on a tour of disorders of speech, reading and writing, object recognition, spatial cognition, memory, and movement and thought; along the way they mention right-hemisphere contributions to language, the effects of callosal damage, the dementias, and "neuropsychiatric disorders." These last include Tourette’s disorder and autism, which, with schizophrenia, are described rather charmingly as the bridesmaids at the (re)unification of neurology and psychiatry.