Combining personal testimony about her father's illness and interviews with healthcare professionals, Gerrard's book is a holistic, sensitively written examination of dementia and those the condition affects both directly and indirectly.
'Immensely powerful ... her investigation of this terrible illness is sensitive and compelling' - The Sunday Times
After her own father's death from dementia, the writer and campaigner Nicci Gerrard set out to explore the illness that now touches millions of us, yet which we still struggle to speak about. What does dementia mean, for those who live with it, and those who care for them?
This truthful, humane book is an attempt to understand. It is filled with stories, both moving and optimistic: from those living with dementia to those planning the end of life, from the scientists unlocking the mysteries of the brain to the therapists using art and music to enrich the lives of sufferers, from the campaigners battling for greater compassion in care to the families trying to make sense of this 'incomprehensible de-creation of the self'.
Publisher: Penguin Books Ltd
ISBN: 9780141986432
Number of pages: 272
Weight: 203 g
Dimensions: 198 x 130 x 16 mm
Immensely powerful . . . an incisive and compelling read. Gerrard, a crime novelist and former journalist, visits the "fresh hell" of hospitals across the UK, and interviews sufferers and those whose lives have been indelibly shaped by the diagnosis of a loved one . . . As well as being part-memoir and part-reportage, What Dementia Teaches Us About Love is also a great part philosophical inquiry into the nature of self and what it is to be human. - The Sunday Times
Essential reading about love, life and care - Kate Mosse, author of Labyrinth
An extraordinarily luminous book, at once terribly sad and frightening but also somehow hopeful and energising. - Nick Duerden, Independent
Nobody has written on dementia as well as Nicci Gerrard in this new book. Kind, knowing and infinitely useful - Andrew Marr
Gerrard ranges widely and wisely, raising questions about what it is to be human and facing truths too deep for tears - Blake Morrison, poet and author of And When Did You Last See Your Father?
This is a tender, lyrical, profound, urgent book . . . Gerrard has penned a treatise on what it is to be human - Yasmin Alibhai-Brown, columnist and author
Evocative and powerful, shining a light on a world which is often hidden and misunderstood - Jane Cummings, Chief Nursing Officer for England
Gerrard writes beautifully, encyclopaedically and with humanity - Nicholas Timmins, senior fellow at the Institute for Government and the King’s Fund, honorary fellow of Royal College of Physicians, author of Five Giants
Nicci Gerrard exudes understanding of the breadth, scale and complexity of the dementias and the challenges they pose for society. Yet she communicates simply, personally and practically as if speaking individually to each of us - Sebastian Crutch, Professor of Neuropsychology, Dementia Research Centre, University College London
Nicci Gerrard writes with power, insight, empathy and extraordinary beauty about the world of dementia . . . and demonstrates how we can address the fear, despair and ignorance that has accompanied its spread - Paul Webster, editor of the Observer
Immensely powerful . . . shot through with insights. Gerrard's book is an elegant yet devastating interrogation into this fatal loss of self, and is part-reportage, part-philosophical inquiry, but, above all, intensely personal. - Helen Davies, The Sunday Times (Books of the Year)
A profound and powerful exploration of how society interprets and deals with a health challenge that will only deepen over the coming decades - Anjana Ahuja, Financial Times (Essential Reads 2019)
How can you love someone when they no longer know who you are? When they don't remember you and they are distressed by your presence?
This is a very moving and important book. Treating dementia is one of the...
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What Dementia Teaches Us About Love by Nicci Gerrard, who is one of my favourite authors, is every bit as beautiful and well-written as I had known it would be. To witness the gradual decline of someone you love is... More
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