Marilyn Reynolds is the author of ten books of realistic teen fiction in the True-to- Life Series from Hamilton High, a book for educators, I Won t Read and You Can t Make Me: Reaching Reluctant Teen Readers, and a collection of personal essays, Over 70 and I Don t Mean MPH. She started work on Til Death or Dementia Do Us Part shortly after her husband, Michael Reynolds, was diagnosed with Frontotemporal Dementia (FTD). At that time, in 2009, Reynolds searched in vain for personal stories written by FTD caregivers. Finding none, she set about writing the book she wished she could have read. It usually takes Reynolds nine months to a year to write a book. This eight year project was often laborious and excruciating. She hopes that her original mission will be fulfilled, and that others may gain a degree of insight and understanding through this account of her struggles to meet the financial, physical, and emotional challenges that occurred with her bright, talented, loving, husband s passage into the hell that is FTD. A retired teacher, Reynolds remains actively involved in education through writing programs for underserved youth, and through author visits to middle and high school students. With three grown children and five nearly grown grandchildren, Reynolds enjoys family gatherings, walks in her Sacramento neighborhood, movies and dinners out with friends, and the luxury of reading at odd hours of the day and night. She is happy to now be at work on the 11th book in the Hamilton High series.
Marilyn Reynolds honest and eloquent portrait of her husband's
degenerative memory loss guides the reader along a complex and
heartbreaking journey with insight and humor, grace and honesty.
It's a book for those who are undergoing similar sorrows, for those
who want to learn more about dementia, and for all of us who
empathize with the tragicomedy of the human condition. --Elizabeth
Rosner, author of Electric City, a novel, and Survivor Cafe: The
Legacy of Trauma and the Labyrinth of Memory.
Vivid, loving, rich in detail, Til Death or Dementia Do Us Part
takes us through Marilyn Reynolds's arduous and valiant passage
with her husband s FTD. I speak as one who knows: This book is full
of truth. --Rachel Hadas, author of Strange Relation and The Golden
Road
In this compassionately written memoir, author Marilyn Reynolds
provides a detailed account of her husband s first puzzling
symptoms of FTD, Frontotemporal Dementia, and of his gradual
decline. This book will be helpful to many who have loved ones
suffering from dementias of all types. Marilyn takes readers on a
journey from the very early signs of the disease, the emotional and
practical adjustments required, financial, living arrangements,
etc., as her husband s disease progressed. It is written
compassionately, honestly and directly and with courage. --Frank
Capobianco, MD, Psychiatry
Ask a Question About this Product More... |