A tragic story of the devastation of a family by early-onset Alzheimer's Disease, which, in this fictional account, is inherited. Told from the dual viewpoints of a precocious teenager and an old man. The teenager is seeking answers to his mother's disease, as well as clues to his family and her past. The old man is striving to make sense of his life, and waiting for the return of his daughter. We find out quickly that the two are related, as are all the sufferers of this fictional version of AD. The novel alternates between the teenager's quest and the old man's struggles, while also including a fairy tale that they share, as well as a more clinical account of the origins of the disease.
The novel builds as both the teenager and the old man face problems of their own. The teenager's mother is institutionalized with AD, the old man does his best to hang on to what he has and await his daughter's return. The author does a good job of bringing the characters together and bringing the novel to a close.
The writing seems overwrought, especially in the emotional passages. The more dramatic the scene, the more the writing needs to be simple and clear to convey a powerful message. The author seems to take the opposite approach, and I found it cloying and overly sentimental.
The fairy tale, which describes a culture where no one remembers anything and everyone is happy seemed particularly inappropriate for the subject matter. It's hard to believe that people under threat of developing AD would envision such a place as a relief from their disease - it seems more like a nightmare. It is memory that makes us human - without it, we are little more than animals.
While the author includes many of the more horrific details of AD, he consistently comes back to the idea that sufferers have moments of happy bliss, when they have forgotten everything. I have a close family member with AD, and have never observed this. It's a terrible way to die, as the inflicted person forgets how to read, talk, walk, swallow, breath. Memory loss is only a small part of AD., although the part most often observed and dramatized.
As a novel of love, loss, and family, I think the author has done a good job, especially since this is his first novel and he is young. But to make Alzheimer's such a central part of the novel I consider a mistake. Better to write an essay or memoir about AD and its devastating affect on a family, than to invent a fictional version of the disease and focus so much on the loss of memory.
No comments:
Post a Comment