When you get the Nobel Prize, they ask you to do two things: to prepare an autobiographical sketch, and to prepare a lecture. So one or two days after I hear about the Nobel Prize, Harold Varmus calls me up and says I've got to speak to you. So since he runs Sloan Kettering, he wanted to ride his bicycle up here. I said I better come down and see you. I came to see him and he said, 'Look, this autobiographical sketch, take it seriously. A lot of people just hand in a CV. You know, write about your life. Take the time to do it.'
So I did. It's the first time I described, you know, what it was like to be a Jew in Vienna, and I showed it to friends and they were just amazed, they found it so interesting. And when the booklet came out, which combines your autobiographical essay with the lecture, it was really quite interesting, and many people commented on it. So I took it and I made a book out of it, In Search of Memory, and it went on to win major awards. It won the Los Angeles Times Book Award, in science it won the National Academy of Science award. So that inspired me to go on, and I'd always been interested in arts, and bringing art together with science, and I wrote a book on Vienna 1900, on Klimt, Kokoschka and Schiele, and what neural biology can bring to bear on their work. And again the book has done quite well. I got a lot of pleasure out of doing it. It won the Kreisky Award which is Austria's highest literary award. So I got a lot of pleasure out of doing that. And also, it came at a time when my whole relationship to Vienna was changing.