Fr. 30.90

Aliceheimer’s - Alzheimer’s Through the Looking Glass

English · Paperback / Softback

Shipping usually within 3 to 5 weeks

Description

Read more










"ôAlice was always beautifulùArmenian immigrant beautiful, with thick, curly black hair, olive skin, and big dark eyes,ö writes Dana Walrath. Alice also has AlzheimerÆs, and while she can remember all the songs from The Music Man, she can no longer attend to the basics of caring for herself. Alice moves to live with her daughter, Dana, in Vermont, and the story begins.
AliceheimerÆs is a series of illustrated vignettes, daily glimpses into their world with AlzheimerÆs. WalrathÆs time with her mother was marked by humor and clarity: ôWith a community of help that included pirates, good neighbors, a cast of characters from space-time travel, and my dead father hovering in the branches of the maple trees that surround our Vermont farmhouse, AliceheimerÆs let us write our own story dailyùa story that, in turn, helps rewrite the dominant medical narrative of aging.ö
In drawing Alice, Walrath literally enrobes her with cut-up pages from AliceÆs Adventures in Wonderland. She weaves elements from Lewis CarrollÆs classic throughout her text, using evocative phrases from the novel to introduce the vignettes, such as ôDisappearing Alice,ö ôMissing Pieces,ö ôFalling Slowly,ö ôCuriouser and Curiouser,ö and ôA Mad Tea Party.ö
Walrath writes that creating this book allowed her not only to process her grief over her motherÆs dementia, but also ôto remember the magic laughter of that time.ö Graphic medicine, she writes, ôlets us better understand those who are hurting, feel their stories, and redraw and renegotiate those social boundaries. Most of all, it gives us a way to heal and to fly over the world as Alice does.ö In the end, AliceheimerÆs is indeed strangely and utterly uplifting.


About the author

Dana Walrath—an anthropologist, artist, and writer—is on the faculty of the University of Vermont College of Medicine and the author of Like Water on Stone. Learn more about her work at danawalrath.com.

Summary

A graphic memoir of the author’s experiences of her mother’s battle with dementia. Illustrates the two-way nature of storytelling as a process that heals both the giver and the receiver of story.

Customer reviews

No reviews have been written for this item yet. Write the first review and be helpful to other users when they decide on a purchase.

Write a review

Thumbs up or thumbs down? Write your own review.

For messages to CeDe.ch please use the contact form.

The input fields marked * are obligatory

By submitting this form you agree to our data privacy statement.