Kirkus Reviews QR Code
STILL ALICE by Lisa Genova

STILL ALICE

by Lisa Genova

Pub Date: Jan. 1st, 2009
ISBN: 978-1-4391-0281-7
Publisher: Pocket

First novel efficiently showcases the experience of developing early-onset Alzheimer’s.

In 24 months, 49-year-old Harvard psychology professor Alice Howland exchanges the role of high-achieving teacher, wife and mother of three for that of a disoriented, inarticulate, forgetful shell of her former self. Stricken much earlier than most by this progressive, degenerative disease for which there is no cure, Alice loses her profession, independence, clarity and contact with the world with shocking rapidity in a narrative that sometimes reads more like a dramatized documentary than three-dimensional fiction. Genova, an online columnist for the National Alzheimer’s Association, has a brisk style and lays out the facts of the disease—statistics, tests, drugs, clinical trials—plainly, often rather technically. The responses to Alice of her three grown-up children, who are also at risk of the disease; the struggles of her equally high-flying husband, a Harvard biologist; and Alice’s own emotional responses, including fear, suicidal thoughts, shame and panic, are offered in semi-educational fashion, sometimes movingly, sometimes mechanically. Alice’s address to the Alzheimer’s Association Annual Dementia Care Conference is an affecting final public statement before her descent into fog and the loving support of her children.

Worthy, benign and readable, but not always lifelike.