Book details
Still Alice
by Lisa Genova
2007
About the book
Alice Howland is a fifty-year-old linguistics professor at Harvard whose life centers on the mastery of language and cognitive performance. Her world shifts when she begins experiencing disorientation and memory gaps, leading to a diagnosis of early-onset Alzheimer’s disease. The story follows the rapid decline of her executive function and her struggle to maintain a connection to her husband and three grown children. As her professional identity dissolves, she relies on internal coping mechanisms and digital reminders to navigate a world that becomes increasingly unfamiliar and frightening.
This book serves healthcare professionals, caregivers, and family members seeking to understand the internal reality of neurodegenerative decline. Readers gain a technical and emotional perspective on how dementia affects communication and social dynamics within a household. Instead of clinical data, the text provides a first-person simulation of cognitive loss. Individuals interested in the intersection of neuroscience and identity read this to see how the self persists when memory fails. You walk away with a practical understanding of the patience required to support someone losing their autonomy.
Details
- Published
- 2007
- Language
- EN