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    Still Alice (Paperback) By (author) Lisa Genova

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    Short Description for Still Alice"Still Alice" is a compelling debut novel about a 50-year-old woman's sudden descent into early onset Alzheimer's disease, written by a first-time author who holds a Ph.D. in neuroscience. Reminiscent of "A Beautiful Mind" and "Ordinary People," this work packs an emotional punch.
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  • Heart Wrenching5

    Lori-Ann Prawdzik Having worked with people with Alzheimer's Disease I really feel that Ms Genova captures the way a person would feel. I think it portrays an excellent insight into the failing mind and could be a quintessential tool for people working in the field of Alzheimer's. by Lori-Ann Prawdzik

  • Still Alice4

    Bonnie Renzi At the age of fifty, Alice Howland is at the pinnacle of her career. She has been a psychology professor, a Ph.D, a noted author, an accomplished researcher and a respected speaker. For the past 25 years, her career in the Harvard community has been a source of pride for her and her family. How ironic then, that this gifted, intelligent woman, whose intellectual capabilities have secured her identity in her professional community, should suddenly find herself unable to remember the simplest details, disoriented in a onetime very familiar location and missing important engagements because she simply forgot. This happens often enough for Alice to seek a medical opinion and, after many tests and examinations, the diagnosis is frightening: early onset Alzheimer's disease.

    Genova's sensitive exploration of this insidious disorder provides the basis for the story Still Alice and details its heartbreaking outcome. We travel with Alice and her family through each phase of the disease, its effect on the brain, and how it changes her life and that of her family. The author holds a degree in neuroscience from Harvard herself and is able to tell the story through Alice's point of view which provides a fascinating perspective.

    As the disease progresses and it becomes apparent that her career is over, Alice's family undergoes profound changes also. Two of her three children decide to undergo testing to ascertain whether or not they carry the gene that will result in their developing the disease. Alice's relationship with her third child, daughter Lydia, changes also, but not necessarily in a bad way. A new acceptance seemed to develop between the two that was absent before because Lydia didn't want to go to college and chose a career in acting instead. Mid-way through the book you have:

    "She could see Lydia's history as well, but somehow this woman sitting across from her wasn't inextricably connected to her memories of her youngest child. This made her uneasy and painfully aware that she was declining, her past becoming unhinged from her present. And how strange that she had no problem identifying the man next to Anna as Anna's husband, Charlie, who had entered their lives only a couple of years ago. She pictured her Alzheimer's as a demon in her head, tearing a reckless and illogical path of destruction, ripping apart the wiring from â??Lydia now' to â??Lydia then,' leaving all the Charlie connections unscathed." (Page 200)

    I loved the way this family came together after overcoming their initial anxiety. Even her husband John, who grieved for the loss of the woman he knew, finally was able to come to terms with their new life. I'm not sure this is the way every family would be able to handle this and the author concluded the story before Alice became totally incontinent, unable to communicate, completely bedridden or in the last throes of the disease.

    At the end of the book, she realizes all she's lost:

    "I used to be someone who knew a lot. No one asks for my opinion or advice anymore. I miss that. I used to be curious and independent and confident. I miss being sure of things. There's no peace in being unsure of everything all the time. I miss doing everything easily. I miss being part of what's happening. I miss feeling wanted. I miss my life and my family. I loved my life and my family." (Page 285)

    So very sad. Highly recommended. by Bonnie Renzi

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