This book reverses everything you believed about the brain and aging. The brain doesn’t deteriorate as you get older:
your brain can improve with age.
It makes sense: older people have experienced more in life than younger people. They’ve had to adapt to many more changes, so
older brains are potentially more flexible. Your brain has virtually
infinite possibilities for learning and making connections, and this capacity can increase as you age.
This book shows you how. It will enable you to become a much better thinker and communicator as you progress through life. You will be able to:
- Remember names, facts, and figures using easy to learn memory techniques.
- Achieve higher levels of creativity, clearer organization of thoughts, increased concentration, better communications, and dramatically improved memory and creativity.
- Read more rapidly and with greater retention.
- Learn principles and techniques used by great minds in the business, sports, and creative worlds.
Sobre o autor
Raymond Dennis Keene OBE is an English chess grandmaster, an FIDE International arbiter, a chess organizer, and a journalist and author. He won the British Chess Championship in 1971 and British Chess Championship in 1971, and was the first player from England to earn a Grandmaster norm, in 1974. In 1976 he became the second Englishman to be awarded the Grandmaster title, and he was the second British chess player to beat an incumbent World Chess Champion. He represented England in eight Chess Olympiads. Keene retired from competitive play in 1986 at the age of thirty-eight, and is now better known as a chess organizer, columnist and author. He wrote the official biography of Tony Buzan.