by Frans Vermeulen
a review from Will Taylor MD
Frans Vermeulen's Prisma is, first of all, a beautiful book. Care in creation is what we've all come to expect from a work of Vermeulen's, and this offering brings that expectation to a new level.
While the author's Concordant Materia Medica has become the gold standard for the 'left brain' of our art, Prisma strikes off in a new direction as a resource for the right-brained appreciation of our materia medica. It is often far too easy for us to regard our remedies as little white pellets with unpronounceable names and incomprehensible lists of symptoms.
Vermeulen counters this loss with detailed descriptions of the substance in the natural world, folding in generous volumes of insight from anthroposophy, folklore, mythology, toxicology and eclectic use.
While the Concordant is the hands-down winner for succinct comprehensiveness in describing the symptomatology of our remedies, Primsa turns to the task of bringing the most essential of these symptoms to life.
In the Main Symptoms sections, carefully selected narratives from the provings, cases or classical teachers expand the meaning of individual symptoms. One can begin to imagine that Ernest Farrington, Constantine Hering or Margaret Tyler were reading over your shoulder and expanding on each point.
Vermeulen's Concordant is one of the few books of which I own 2 copies one at the office, one at home so as never to be without it. Prisma, I am certain, will join that honor.
Will Taylor MD
Chair of the Dept. of Homeopathy
National College of Naturopathic Medicine
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