Richard Asher is remembered today chiefly for his "refreshingly provoking" articles that "sparkle with sequins--his own aphorisms, imaginary dialogue, fantasies, quotations."Ruth Holland's introduction to
A Sense of Asher, quoted in He thought that medical writing should provide "useful, understandable, and practical knowledge instead of
allotov-words-2-obscure-4-any-1,2-succidin-understanding-them." Anthologies of his articles were well-received, with the
Talking Sense collection being described as "still the best advice on medical writing." Notable articles include:
- The Dangers of Going to Bed (1947) - "one of the most influential medical papers ever written"
- The Seven Sins of Medicine (1949, in Lancet 1949 Aug 27;2(6574):358-60)
- Myxoedematous Madness (1949)
- Munchausen’s syndrome (1951, in Lancet 1951 Feb 10;1(6650):339-41)
- Respectable Hypnosis (1956)
- Why Are Medical Journals So Dull? (1958)
- The Talking Sense trilogy:
- Clinical Sense (1959) with a rueful correction in The Dog in the Night-time (1960)
- Making Sense (1959, in Lancet, 1959, 2, 359)
- Talking Sense (1959, in Lancet, 1959, 2, 417)