"The Ice Pick Cure - The Nobel Prize surgery that ruined thousands of lives" is a harrowing micro-history of the lobotomy. In the 1940s, this brutal procedure-severing connections in the brain's prefrontal cortex with an ice pick-was hailed as a miracle cure for mental illness. Its inventor, Egas Moniz, even won the Nobel Prize.
Author Eleanor Vance details the career of Walter Freeman, the showman doctor who performed lobotomies in his "Lobotomobile" van across America. The book focuses on the victims, including Rosemary Kennedy, whose life was destroyed by the surgery at age 23. It explores how desperation and a lack of pharmaceutical alternatives led medicine down a dark path.
"The Ice Pick Cure" is a cautionary tale about medical hubris. It reminds us that what is considered "cutting-edge science" today can become the barbarism of tomorrow, urging skepticism and ethical vigilance in the face of new "miracle" cures.