The description template you have pasted is for a geriatrics or older-adult prescribing book — the hook, agitation, and bullet framing are built for that audience, not for a neurology localization textbook. I have the full content of this book and can write the correct Amazon description right now, calibrated to the actual reader: the neurology resident who cannot localize at the bedside, the RITE candidate under exam pressure, the fellow who needs the brainstem to finally make sense. Here it is: You are standing at the bedside of a patient with vertigo, a Horner syndrome, and hoarseness — and you need to know where the lesion is before the scan comes back. Most neuroanatomy education gives you structures without reasoning and syndromes without anatomy, leaving you to assemble the two under pressure in a way nobody ever taught you. This book teaches you the method: a systematic, five-part localization framework applied to every structure from the cortex to the peripheral nerve, so you reason to an anatomical answer instead of reaching for one. • Localize before you scan — the Sign-to-Site Localization System converts any bedside finding into a committed anatomical address using five structured steps applied consistently across all 27 chapters • Master the brainstem in one framework — the Rule of Levels, the medial-lateral rule, and the crossed-findings rule resolve every brainstem syndrome to a specific level and transverse position • Read the spinal cord in two dimensions — combine the sensory level with the transverse syndrome pattern to localize any cord lesion to both its segment and its cross-sectional position • Never confuse peripheral and central vertigo again — the HINTS examination is developed from its vestibular anatomy up, so you understand why a normal head impulse test is a central alarm sign • Stroke territory to bedside syndrome — every major arterial territory is mapped to the clinical deficit it produces, so you identify the occluded vessel from the examination alone • One reference section for the whole neuroaxis — the Sign-to-Site Master Compendium indexes every localization in the book by anatomical level with a twelve-vignette integrated drill This book is written for neurology residents, RITE and ABPN board candidates, fellows, and practicing neurologists who need anatomy and clinical reasoning integrated rather than separated. If localization is the defining skill of neurology, this is the book that teaches it as a method.