Alice Weaver Flaherty is an Americanneurologist. She is a researcher, physician, educator, and author of the 2004 book The Midnight Disease: The Drive to Write, Writer's Block, and the Creative Brain, about the neural basis of creativity.[1]
She writes in various genres, including "scientific papers, humorous essays, and picture books".[6] Her book, The Massachusetts General Hospital Handbook of Neurology was for years the most "widely used neurology text in its class".[7] Her most famous book, The Midnight Disease, appeared on "Best Books of 2004" lists in The Washington Post and The San Francisco Chronicle.
Experience with hypergraphia
After her premature twin boys died soon after their birth, Flaherty was full of grief. Several days later, however, she "awoke one morning with an overwhelming desire to put everything on her mind on paper".[8] She describes her experiences with hypergraphia, this overwhelming urge to write. She claims she could not stop for four months. A similar experience occurred after the birth of her premature twin girls, who survived. Following the two births, her abilities to produce creative works were heightened. The Midnight Disease tried to make sense of this phenomenon.
Media work
Flaherty gave a TEDx talk Danger and Creativity, in 2019.[9] She was a consultant on two TV drama series pilots based on her life: The Madness of Jane, created by Rob LaZebnik, and Hysteria, created by Shaun Cassidy. She has appeared on many TV and radio broadcasts as a public advocate for the abilities of patients with brain illnesses. She was featured on the podcast The Great God of Depression, created by Pagan Kennedy, about her interactions with the writer William Styron.[10] Her image hangs in the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, in the oil painting Museum Epiphany 3 painted by Warren and Lucia Prosperi.[11] She was the protagonist of Bedside Manner, directed by Corinne Botz, which in 2016 won the Grand Jury Prize for Best Short Documentary, DOC NYC, Oscar-qualifying.[12]
Publications
Selected journal articles
Graybiel, A.M., Aosaki, T., Flaherty, A.W., Kimura, M. "The basal ganglia and adaptive motor control" (1994) Science, 265 (5180), pp. 1826–1831.
Flaherty, A.W., Graybiel, A.M. "Input-output organization of the sensorimotor striatum in the squirrel monkey" (1994) Journal of Neuroscience, 14 (2), pp. 599–610.
Flaherty A.W. "Frontotemporal and dopaminergic control of idea generation and creative drive". J Comparative Neurology. 2005;493(1):147-53.
Flaherty, A.W. "Creativity and disease: Mechanisms and treatment". Canadian J. Psychiatry. 2011;56(3):132-143.
German translation as "Die Mitternachtskrankheit : warum Schriftsteller schreiben müssen ; Schreibzwang, Schreibrausch, Schreibblockade und das kreative Gehirn" Berlin, 2004. ISBN978-3-932909-39-9
Japanese translation by Toshiko Yoshida. 書きたがる脳 : 言語と創造性の科学 / Kakitagaru nō: gengo to sōzōsei no kagaku. Tōkyō: Randamuhausukōdansha, 2006.
Arabic translation by Haitham Rasheed Farht داء منتصف أل ليل . (Daa Montasaf Al Layl). Abu Dhabi: Kalima; 2021.
Korean translation as Flaherty, Alice W., illus. Magoon, Scott. 호수 의 행운 괴물 다움 [hosu ui haeng-un goemul daum]. Seoul: Marubol Publications; 2008.
Flaherty, Alice W., and Natalia S. Rost. The Massachusetts General Hospital Handbook of Neurology. Philadelphia: Wolters Kluwer Health/Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, 2nd ed. 2007. ISBN978-0-7817-5137-7
Translated into Japanese as Flaherty, Alice W., and Takamichi Hattori. MGH 神経内科ハンドブック / MGH shinkei naika handobukku. Tokyo: Medikaru saiensu intanashonaru, 2001
Flaherty, AW. Playing doctor well. Neurology. 2008;70(11):826-7.
Flaherty, AW. Special effects: What can the dramatic arts teach doctors about improving their performances? Harvard Medical Bulletin. 2009;82(2):12-17.
Flaherty AW. Writing and drugs. Writing and Pedagogy. 4(2), 2012.
Flaherty AW. Homeostasis and the control of creative drive. In R. E. Jung & O. Vartanian (Eds.), The Cambridge Handbook of the Neuroscience of Creativity. New York: Cambridge University Press, 2018. ISBN9781316556238
^"Flaherty Earns Bell Scholarship", Bernardsville News, June 25, 1981. Accessed October 14, 2021, via Newspapers.com. "Alice W. Flaherty, daughter of Franklin and Sarah Flaherty of Brookside, is one of four New Jersey graduating high school students to receive a James B. Fisk Merit Scholarship, sponsored by Bell Laboratories... Flaherty was a student at West Morns Mendham High School and plans a pre-law major at Harvard University."