A powerful and moving exploration of dementia from bestselling novelist Nicci Gerrard, written with painful understanding and offering brilliant insight into one of the most tragic of conditions.
As well as being a novelist, Nicci Gerrard is a journalist, a
campaigner and a humanist celebrant. In 2016 she won the Orwell
Prize for Journalism, for 'Exposing Britain's Social Evils', for a
piece exploring the 'language' of dementia.
Following her father's terrible final year and his death in
November 2014, she and her friend Julia Jones founded John's
Campaign, which insists that the carers of people with dementia
have the same right as parents of sick children to accompany them
when in hospital. The campaign, which seeks to make care for those
who are vulnerable and powerless more compassionate, began in a
kitchen but is now a national movement, recognised by NHS policy
makers, by charities, by nurses and doctors and carers. Four
hundred hospitals have already signed up to the campaign.
Immensely powerful . . . an incisive and compelling read. Gerrard,
a crime novelist and former journalist, visits the "fresh hell" of
hospitals across the UK, and interviews sufferers and those whose
lives have been indelibly shaped by the diagnosis of a loved one .
. . As well as being part-memoir and part-reportage, What Dementia
Teaches Us About Love is also a great part philosophical inquiry
into the nature of self and what it is to be human.
*The Sunday Times*
Essential reading about love, life and care
*author of Labyrinth*
An extraordinarily luminous book, at once terribly sad and
frightening but also somehow hopeful and energising.
*Independent*
Nobody has written on dementia as well as Nicci Gerrard in this new
book. Kind, knowing and infinitely useful
*Andrew Marr*
Gerrard ranges widely and wisely, raising questions about what it
is to be human and facing truths too deep for tears
*Blake Morrison, poet and author of And When Did You Last See Your
Father?*
This is a tender, lyrical, profound, urgent book . . . Gerrard has
penned a treatise on what it is to be human
*columnist and author*
Evocative and powerful, shining a light on a world which is often
hidden and misunderstood
*Jane Cummings, Chief Nursing Officer for England*
Gerrard writes beautifully, encyclopaedically and with humanity
*senior fellow at the Institute for Government and the King’s Fund,
honorary fellow of Royal College of Physicians, author of Five
Giants*
Nicci Gerrard exudes understanding of the breadth, scale and
complexity of the dementias and the challenges they pose for
society. Yet she communicates simply, personally and practically as
if speaking individually to each of us
*Professor of Neuropsychology, Dementia Research Centre, University
College London*
Nicci Gerrard writes with power, insight, empathy and extraordinary
beauty about the world of dementia . . . and demonstrates how we
can address the fear, despair and ignorance that has accompanied
its spread
*editor of the Observer*
Immensely powerful . . . shot through with insights. Gerrard's book
is an elegant yet devastating interrogation into this fatal loss of
self, and is part-reportage, part-philosophical inquiry, but, above
all, intensely personal.
*The Sunday Times (Books of the Year)*
A profound and powerful exploration of how society interprets and
deals with a health challenge that will only deepen over the coming
decades
*Financial Times (Essential Reads 2019)*
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