Abstract

Our legal brethren frequently brandish a text and bellow: "Doctor, do you consider this book authoritative?" In the case of this two-volume set, the answer is a resounding yes. No pretenses with this major work. It is not a handbook, primer, or pocket manual. Nor does it probe the stratospheres of uncharted and undocumented research. It delivers exactly what its title describes, rock-solid<i>Neurology in Clinical Practice</i>. The "twins," as I came to know the two volumes, are dressed in cyan blue with gold appointments. Each has an identical table of contents, list of contributing authors, preface, and index. Yet they demonstrate differences in character that indicate the variance in content and authors. Volume 1, "Principles of Diagnosis and Management," deals with the approach to common (and uncommon) neurological problems. Emphasis is placed on the analysis of information obtained from the history, examination, and special studies and, thereafter, the synthesis

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