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Daniel Tammet

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Daniel Tammet

Goodreads Author


Born
in London, The United Kingdom
Website

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Member Since
August 2012


Daniel Tammet is the subject of the award-winning television documentary, The Boy with the Incredible Brain, as well as a BBC Radio 4 documentary, Two Poets (with Les Murray) and the Kate Bush song, Pi. He is the author of nine books, including the memoir Born on a Blue Day, an ALA Best Book for Young Adults; two collections of essays, Thinking in Numbers, a New Yorker recommendation, and Every Word is a Bird We Teach to Sing, a Booklist Editors' Choice and Listener Magazine Book of the Year; a bilingual poetry collection in English and French, Portraits, and a novel written in French, Mishenka. His writing has appeared in Esquire, The Times Literary Supplement, The Guardian, Aeon and Quadrant, and his books have been translated into thirty ...more

Average rating: 3.82 · 27,538 ratings · 2,809 reviews · 14 distinct worksSimilar authors
Born on a Blue Day

3.84 avg rating — 24,027 ratings — published 2006 — 89 editions
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Thinking In Numbers: On Lif...

3.53 avg rating — 1,925 ratings — published 2012 — 46 editions
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Embracing the Wide Sky: A T...

3.76 avg rating — 904 ratings — published 2009 — 35 editions
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Every Word Is a Bird We Tea...

3.86 avg rating — 783 ratings — published 2017 — 16 editions
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Nine Minds: Inner Lives on ...

3.53 avg rating — 315 ratings14 editions
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Mishenka

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3.66 avg rating — 38 ratings5 editions
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How to be 'Normal' - Notes ...

3.32 avg rating — 31 ratings3 editions
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Fragments de paradis

3.74 avg rating — 19 ratings4 editions
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Nine Minds: Inner Lives on ...

3.50 avg rating — 6 ratings
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Portraits

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3.50 avg rating — 4 ratings
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More books by Daniel Tammet…

Nine Minds

My new book Nine Minds: Inner Lives on the Spectrum is out now in the UK and Ireland. It tells the extraordinary stories of 9 neurodivergent men and women from around the world. From a murder detective and a pioneering surgeon to a Hollywood superstar, each is changing how the world sees those on the spectrum.


'Tammet is on the autistic spectrum ... able to live in a “thought-world of numbers”, an Read more of this blog post »
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Published on July 22, 2024 06:49

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Nine Minds by Daniel Tammet
"I really like Daniel Tammet’s style of writing. The word syntax is a bit different than how my mind works, and the focus is on different aspects of the individuals‘ personalities. I think back on all the people I’ve known throughout my life, especial" Read more of this review »
Nine Minds by Daniel Tammet
"A beautiful reminder that us Autistics are as varied and talented as any other person, even (or despite) the neurotype commonalities we share."
Nine Minds by Daniel Tammet
"Reviting! Each chapter immerses you into a different mind."
Nine Minds by Daniel Tammet
"Fascinating look into the lives of 9 neurodivergent people. #9 was a most welcome surprise!"
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The Pull of the Stars by Emma Donoghue
The Pull of the Stars
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The Soccer War by Ryszard Kapuściński
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World Light by Halldór Laxness
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Paradise Reclaimed by Halldór Laxness
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World Light by Halldór Laxness
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Quotes by Daniel Tammet  (?)
Quotes are added by the Goodreads community and are not verified by Goodreads. (Learn more)

“You don't have to be disabled to be different, because everybody's different.”
Daniel Tammet, Born on a Blue Day

“Why learn a number like pi to so many decimal places? The answer I gave then as I do now is that pi is for me an extremely beautiful and utterly unique thing. Like the Mona Lisa or a Mozart symphony, pi is its own reason for loving it.”
Daniel Tammet, Born on a Blue Day

“No relationship is without its difficulties and this is certainly true when one or both of the persons involved has an autistic spectrum disorder. Even so, I believe what is truly essential to the success of any relationship is not so much compatibility, but love. When you love someone, virtually anything is possible.”
Daniel Tammet, Born on a Blue Day

“With abstraction, birds become numbers. Men and maniocs, too. We can look at a scene and say, ‘There are two men, three birds and four maniocs’ but also, ‘There are nine things’ (summing two and three and four). The Pirahã do not think this way. They ask, ‘What are these things?’ ‘Where are they?’, ‘What do they do?’ A bird flies, a man breathes and a manioc plant grows. It is meaningless to try to bring them together. Man is a small world. The world is a big manioc.”
Daniel Tammet

“Things were changing; I was changing. All swelling limbs and sweating brain, suddenly I had more body than I knew what to do with. Arms and legs became the prey of low desktops and narrow corridors, were ambushed by sharp corners. Mr Baxter ignored my plight. Bodies were inimical to mathematics, or so we were led to believe. Bad hair, acrid breath, lumpy skin, all vanished for an hour every Tuesday and Thursday. Young minds in the buff soared into the sphere of pure reason. Pages turned to parallelograms; cities, circumferences; recipes, ratios. Shorn of our bearings, we groped our way around in this rarefied air.”
Daniel Tammet, Thinking in Numbers: How Maths Illuminates Our Lives

“We know next to nothing with any certainty about Pythagoras, except that he was not really called Pythagoras. The name by which he is known to us was probably a nickname bestowed by his followers. According to one source, it meant ‘He who spoke truth like an oracle’. Rather than entrust his mathematical and philosophical ideas to paper, Pythagoras is said to have expounded them before large crowds. The world’s most famous mathematician was also its first rhetorician.”
Daniel Tammet, Thinking in Numbers: How Maths Illuminates Our Lives

“Perhaps talk of counters turned the boy’s thoughts to his father’s glove shop. His father would have accounted for all his transactions using the tokens. They were hard and round and very thin, made of copper or brass. There were counters for one pair of gloves, and for two pairs, and three and four and five. But there was no counter for zero. No counters existed for all the sales that his father did not close.”
Daniel Tammet, Thinking in Numbers: How Maths Illuminates Our Lives

“One particular aspect of Siddhartha’s revelation of the outside world has always struck me. Quite possibly he lived his first thirty years without any knowledge of number. How must he have felt, then, to see crowds of people mingling in the streets? Before that day he would not have believed that so many people existed in all the world. And what wonder it must have been to discover flocks of birds, and piles of stones, leaves on trees and blades of grass! To suddenly realise that, his whole life long, he had been kept at arm’s length from multiplicity.”
Daniel Tammet, Thinking in Numbers: How Maths Illuminates Our Lives

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