Still Alice
by
Lisa Genova (Goodreads Author)
What if every memory you've ever had will be erased from your mind, and you have no choice but to carry on...powerless to stop it?
Alice Howland is proud of the life she worked so hard to build. At fifty years old, she's a cognitive psychology professor at Harvard and a world-renowned expert in linguistics with a successful husband and three grown children. When she begins...more
Alice Howland is proud of the life she worked so hard to build. At fifty years old, she's a cognitive psychology professor at Harvard and a world-renowned expert in linguistics with a successful husband and three grown children. When she begins...more
Audio CD, 7 pages
Published
January 6th 2009
by Simon & Schuster Audio
(first published June 13th 2007)
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After you read this, you will never look at Alzheimer's the same again. Nor will you ever forget it. Oh the irony.
I'd always correlated Alzheimer's disease with old age and heard the best way to combat it was to exercise your brain. I do my fair share of reading, can solve a Sudoku puzzle faster than 98% of the population, and I shun mindless chick flicks for your more intelligent thrillers, but I'll never be as brilliant as Alice, a 50-year-old Harvard professor diagnosed with early-onset Alzhe...more
I'd always correlated Alzheimer's disease with old age and heard the best way to combat it was to exercise your brain. I do my fair share of reading, can solve a Sudoku puzzle faster than 98% of the population, and I shun mindless chick flicks for your more intelligent thrillers, but I'll never be as brilliant as Alice, a 50-year-old Harvard professor diagnosed with early-onset Alzhe...more
Fifty year old Alice Howland, a world-renowned expert in linguistics and a cognitive psychology professor at Harvard is diagnosed with early-onset Alzheimer's disease. Still Alice is the story of the unraveling of Alice's life as her disease progresses.
I started out not enjoying this book. The author's main character wasn't very likeable – she seemed too focused on how smart she was and how important and prestigious her job was, but I was quickly won over. Lisa Genova wrote from Alice's perspect...more
I started out not enjoying this book. The author's main character wasn't very likeable – she seemed too focused on how smart she was and how important and prestigious her job was, but I was quickly won over. Lisa Genova wrote from Alice's perspect...more
Rating 4.5 Stars
It's difficult to write that I really enjoyed Still Alice considering the subject matter, which is not an easy one to read about. Lisa Genova has provided a really insightful and intuitive account into the world of the early onset of Alzheimer's Disease. This is a very well written book and rather than it being told in an overly dramatic way, which could have been the manner some authors may have approached the story, Genova related it in a most respectful, considerate and compas...more
It's difficult to write that I really enjoyed Still Alice considering the subject matter, which is not an easy one to read about. Lisa Genova has provided a really insightful and intuitive account into the world of the early onset of Alzheimer's Disease. This is a very well written book and rather than it being told in an overly dramatic way, which could have been the manner some authors may have approached the story, Genova related it in a most respectful, considerate and compas...more
Still Alice reads like a memoir of Alzheimer's disease written by a family member but is in fact the first novel by a neuroscientist who, apart from being a great deal younger, lives the successful life of a top academic, as does Alice.
The book is unputdownable. I read through the night; dawn came and went and still I couldn't put it down but I don't really know why. The writing was ok, a bit heavy-handed at times, the denoument was predetermined and inevitable but still the book was as gripping...more
The book is unputdownable. I read through the night; dawn came and went and still I couldn't put it down but I don't really know why. The writing was ok, a bit heavy-handed at times, the denoument was predetermined and inevitable but still the book was as gripping...more
I give this book 5 stars not because its an amazing piece of literature but because of its impact on me. I can't stop thinking about it and when I was reading it I couldn't put it down. It is the story of Alice, a brilliant professor of cognitive psychology at Harvard and a world-renowned expert in linguistics who discovers she has early onset Alzheimer's disease. This book is beautiful and terrifying - ringing true in every word. To quote a reviewer, "with a master storyteller's easy eloquence,...more
This book was great. If you have gone through Alzheimer's Disase before with a loved one, you will recognize and love this character. The twist is that she has early-onset AD, so she is only 50 years old, her children are grown and she has a successful career. This was a great book. The story was great, the characters seemed real and believable, the writing was clear and direct. In fact, it reminded me a lot of Kite Runner because there too I just loved the story and the characters, but the writ...more
Feb 24, 2009
Kimberly Whitney
rated it
5 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Recommends it for:
yes
Recommended to Kimberly by:
my mother
Having this diease affecting my husbands mother (frontal lobe dementia; onset at age 58) this book shed a lot of light on some things for me. I do not have a medical background, and I had not spent much time with my mother-in-law because we have not lived close to each other, this book helped me to understand better what exactly she is going through.
Some of the situations Alice experiences brought back some memories of things my mother-in-law had done in the past, signs that possibly we chalked...more
Some of the situations Alice experiences brought back some memories of things my mother-in-law had done in the past, signs that possibly we chalked...more
I have never, in all my reading years, sobbed quite so much or ached as deeply as I did while reading Still Alice. I am sobbed out, hollowed out.
My beloved Nanna was only diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease in the last year or so and thus, the reading of this novel took on an even more personal meaning for me.
Lisa Genova's expert and exquisite depiction of Alzheimer's disease (in Alice Howland's case - early onset) is riveting, enthralling, and breathtakingly tragic. This book reads as a thrille...more
My beloved Nanna was only diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease in the last year or so and thus, the reading of this novel took on an even more personal meaning for me.
Lisa Genova's expert and exquisite depiction of Alzheimer's disease (in Alice Howland's case - early onset) is riveting, enthralling, and breathtakingly tragic. This book reads as a thrille...more
May 12, 2012
Judy
rated it
4 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Recommends it for:
everyone with even an inkling about Alzheimer's Disease
Recommended to Judy by:
YLTO monthly read
Dear potential reader of Still Alice,
You are considering reading this book for one or more reasons. Perhaps, a friend recommended it. Maybe you are hoping to learn more about Alzheimer's Disease. It might be you just want to know why everyone is talking about it. I don't know your reason(s), but if you want to know the answers to the following questions, read it.
*Can genetic testing determine if you will get Alzheimer's?
*Does Early-onset Alzheimer's differ from Alzheimer's Disease?
*What is it li...more
You are considering reading this book for one or more reasons. Perhaps, a friend recommended it. Maybe you are hoping to learn more about Alzheimer's Disease. It might be you just want to know why everyone is talking about it. I don't know your reason(s), but if you want to know the answers to the following questions, read it.
*Can genetic testing determine if you will get Alzheimer's?
*Does Early-onset Alzheimer's differ from Alzheimer's Disease?
*What is it li...more
Alice is a Harvard professor, published author, and nationally respected expert in her field of study. Early-onset Alzheimer's disease nails her in mid-career and is especially devastating to her self-esteem because so much of her identity is wrapped up in her intellectual gifts and stellar memory. The story follows the gradual deterioration of Alice's mental capacity, and the attendant frustration and heartache for Alice and those who love her. There are also small triumphs along the way. Alice...more
I reread this in 2011 for a local book club discussion and can honestly say my opinion and review as written in 2010 stands as follows:
Dr. Alice Howland is a highly respected Harvard professor in the Psychology Department specializing in psycholinguistics. She is also the much loved wife of Dr. John Howland, also a Harvard professor, and mother of three, Anna (a Harvard educated lawyer), Tom (a Harvard educated doctor) and Lydia (an actress who thus far has chosen not to attend college). Alice i...more
Dr. Alice Howland is a highly respected Harvard professor in the Psychology Department specializing in psycholinguistics. She is also the much loved wife of Dr. John Howland, also a Harvard professor, and mother of three, Anna (a Harvard educated lawyer), Tom (a Harvard educated doctor) and Lydia (an actress who thus far has chosen not to attend college). Alice i...more
Moving and compassionate...I wanted to know more about Alice...I grew to love her and found myself cheering her on!
This was written beautifully and from the mind of one who has early-onset Alzheimer's. Wow, I was taken back and couldn't put this one down. Very realistic and informative as well as moving.
The family portrayed was so real that I had to remind myself that it was Fiction. The author did a wonderful job getting into the mind of someone with this disease and her presentation of the cli...more
This was written beautifully and from the mind of one who has early-onset Alzheimer's. Wow, I was taken back and couldn't put this one down. Very realistic and informative as well as moving.
The family portrayed was so real that I had to remind myself that it was Fiction. The author did a wonderful job getting into the mind of someone with this disease and her presentation of the cli...more
This book has changed me. Lisa Genova's writing style is wonderful- I feel more informed, aware, sensitive and moved by being engrossed in Alice's life and experience. As a nurse, I am a better caregiver from reading this book. As a nurse educator, I will use some brief passages from the book to help my students' understand and develop caring approaches to their clients and families. And sadly, as a niece, granddaughter and great-grandaughter of women who have suffered from Alzheimers Disease,...more
Wow! What a painful, wonderful book. I couldn't put it down. It was like reading a suspense novel. This book describes the feelings of a woman diagnosed with early-onset Alzheimer's Disease. You walk through her days, her thoughts, her losses, her family interactions, her victories, etc. I was glad to learn more about the disease and gain more understanding about those with dementia. Fascinating, scary, eye-opening, and important for all to read.
I couldn't put this book down. And, I agree with other reviews of this book that it was heartbreaking. But, I saw something else in this story. Pain and heartache and change comes into everyone's life in some form and not everything that comes from that is bad. Genova does a good job of showing the devastation in Alzheimers but also the beauty in redefined relationships.
The subject matter of this book (Alzheimer's Disease) made it a very difficult book for me to read. The author, who is a Harvard trained neuroscientist chose to write this fictional book from Alice's point of view. Most books written about Alzheimer's is from the caregivers point of view. I believe that because of her background, and the book being recognized by the Alzheimer's Association, her description of what life is like for a victim of early-onset Alzheimer's is as close to factual as one...more
Mar 30, 2009
Lee Anne
rated it
4 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
borrowed-not-bought
Before I read a page of this, knowing it was about early-onset Alzheimer's, from the victim's point of view, I imagined it would be like Flowers for Algernon, like by the end of the book, there would be nothing, text-wise. Wrong.
Then, I started reading, and I have to say, it starts a little clunky: places are over-explained, there's a lot of awkward phrasing. So I figured it would read like what it was: a formerly self-published book by a neurological wonk who'd never written fiction before. Wr...more
Then, I started reading, and I have to say, it starts a little clunky: places are over-explained, there's a lot of awkward phrasing. So I figured it would read like what it was: a formerly self-published book by a neurological wonk who'd never written fiction before. Wr...more
I almost cried when this book ended. And I knew it had to end because Alice has early onset Alzheimer's Disease. This book is beautifully written with such graceful style with heartbreaking compassion. I listened to the audio version and it was read by the author. I felt at times as though I was Alice, thinking as she did. One of the best books for me in 2010.
Still Alice by Lisa Genova is more frightening than a Stephen King novel. Genova is brilliant as she takes you into the mind of Alice, a fifty year old Harvard professor with early on-set Alzheimer's disease. The author hones in on the little day to day nuances of forgetfulness that make you question your own brain and its fortitude. My favorite part of the book is when Alice is referring to her Harvard colleagues and their reactions to her newly diagnosed disease. In my opinion, this very quote...more
This book will stop you in your tracks. Whatever you had been doing before you started reading Still Alice, will have to be put off until you finish...It is that good. Genova draws the reader quickly into the story of 51 year old Alice, a highly driven Harvard professor with 3 grown children. At the novel's opening Alice is travelling all over the country and world, giving lectures and attending conferences, but the foundations of her solid and successful world are starting to crumble. After she...more
Feb 22, 2009
Joy (Thoughts of Joy)
rated it
5 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
best-book
You can read my thoughts here. (4.75/5)
As highly recommended as this book is and as much as I wanted to read it, it took me a good while to muster the courage to actually do it. I was intimidated by the subject because I lived for a year with a family where the elderly grandmother had Alzheimer's, and even though there was much I didn't understand I witnessed first-hand how traumatic her condition was for the entire family. Finally I decided to just go for it, and when the novel was over I sat there for a while, heartbroken, not know...more
The main character of this book is a 50 year old woman who has a very successful and fulfilled life as a Harvard Cognitive Psychology Professor, a Husband with as many credentials and 3 grown well adjusted children. She is diagnosed with early on-set Alzheimer's disease. She slowly loses her thoughts and memories and is aware at first that this is happening. As the disease progresses, she is forced to give up lecturing and working all together. Each famiy member relates differently to the person...more
This is a sensitive and optimistic narrative about a Harvard professor who is a victim of early onset Alzheimer's disease. It is certainly a timely topic, though at first I felt some trepidation about even thinking about it. The author, much like the title character, is a Dr. of neuroscience at Harvard, and well informed on her topic.
She shows great insight into the changing mental state of Alice as well as describing some of the same events from the perspective of those who observe Alice, incl...more
She shows great insight into the changing mental state of Alice as well as describing some of the same events from the perspective of those who observe Alice, incl...more
Wow! This is an incredible read. Still Alice is so well written that you don't even realize what the author is setting you up for until the loss hits you. In the beginning the writing is full of complicated scientific descriptions that are hard to digest. Alice is brilliant and it's a little intimidating. I want to skip over the scholarly explanations. Then Alice is diagnosed with Alzheimer’s. As her memory starts to fail I notice that now the pages are full of uncertainty and shame instead of d...more
I'm at the age where Early Onset Alzheimers comes closer to my radar. This book is the fictional story of a Harvard professor with the disease.
I appreciated that the point of view was that of the affected person and not by a caregiver. It gave me a better understanding of how devastating it is as your life and dignity is slowly stolen from you. I think people often erroneously think that the disease is harder on a family member than it is on the victim (for lack of a better word).
I've read revi...more
I appreciated that the point of view was that of the affected person and not by a caregiver. It gave me a better understanding of how devastating it is as your life and dignity is slowly stolen from you. I think people often erroneously think that the disease is harder on a family member than it is on the victim (for lack of a better word).
I've read revi...more
I can't even begin to say how much I loved this book. It follows Alice Howland, a 50-year-old cognitive psychology professor at Harvard and a world-renowned expert in linguistics. And then, she's diagnosed with early-onset Alzheimer's disease.
This book is a very fascinating look at what someone with this horrible disease is going through. And it shows us that Alzheimer's doesn't discriminate. Reading this book is like reading a memoir because it shows us Alzheimer's from the point of view of th...more
This book is a very fascinating look at what someone with this horrible disease is going through. And it shows us that Alzheimer's doesn't discriminate. Reading this book is like reading a memoir because it shows us Alzheimer's from the point of view of th...more
It's the really first time that I actually run into an Alzheimer case... more or less everyone is aware how it is, but it seems that at least talking about myself I was missing so many things about it.
I loved the book (it should be obvious by my rating) it is so hard to think that this is not a true story... Lisa Genova gives me the impression that she herself was suffering from dementia and miraculously managed to get herself back together... and it's a fictional novel not even based on a true...more
I loved the book (it should be obvious by my rating) it is so hard to think that this is not a true story... Lisa Genova gives me the impression that she herself was suffering from dementia and miraculously managed to get herself back together... and it's a fictional novel not even based on a true...more
The first reason I read this book was that I wanted to know more about Alzheimer’s disease since now I am working on my thesis that somehow related with Alzheimer’s.
Alice was diagnosed with early-onset of Alzheimer’s disease at the age of 50. At first she didn’t know what was wrong with her. She kept on forgetting things but she just suspected that it might be a symptom her menopausal period. Until one day she went to a neurologist and found out the truth...
This book gives quite a clear image o...more
Alice was diagnosed with early-onset of Alzheimer’s disease at the age of 50. At first she didn’t know what was wrong with her. She kept on forgetting things but she just suspected that it might be a symptom her menopausal period. Until one day she went to a neurologist and found out the truth...
This book gives quite a clear image o...more
Jan 27, 2011
Bridget
rated it
5 of 5 stars
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
miadb,
read-on-kindle
This book really affected me emotionally. Like, really affected me. Like, I very nearly cried on the Metro during one scene and I absolutely sobbed for the last 25% of the book. I'm not sure why, exactly. My mother's grandmother had Alzheimers disease for at least a decade, but while I loved my Grandma Rose, I wouldn't say I was especially connected with her at the time of her death. (To be fair, and so I don't seem like a total dick - I was 14 and living at boarding school. Wait, I'm not sure t...more
| topics | posts | views | last activity | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bibliophile Beauties: * Still Alice - June 2013 | 19 | 15 | Jun 16, 2013 03:43am | |
| Did it leave you unsettled too? | 39 | 337 | Apr 03, 2013 05:11pm | |
| Still Alice - Help! (SPOILERS) | 78 | 774 | Mar 27, 2013 09:57am | |
| Wanderlust Book ...: Impressions of the book | 11 | 31 | Feb 12, 2013 08:48am |
I'm a Harvard-trained Neuroscientist, a Meisner-trained actress, and an entirely untrained writer!
My first novel, STILL ALICE, winner of the 2008 Bronte Prize, nominated for 2010 Indies Choice Debut Book of the Year by the American Booksellers Association, and winner of the 2011 Bexley Book of the Year Award spent over 40 weeks on the New York Times bestseller list. It has been translated into 25...more
More about Lisa Genova...
My first novel, STILL ALICE, winner of the 2008 Bronte Prize, nominated for 2010 Indies Choice Debut Book of the Year by the American Booksellers Association, and winner of the 2011 Bexley Book of the Year Award spent over 40 weeks on the New York Times bestseller list. It has been translated into 25...more
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“She liked being reminded of butterflies. She remembered being six or seven and crying over the fates of the butterflies in her yard after learning that they lived for only a few days. Her mother had comforted her and told her not to be sad for the butterflies, that just because their lives were short didn't mean they were tragic. Watching them flying in the warm sun among the daisies in their garden, her mother had said to her, see, they have a beautiful life. Alice liked remembering that.”
—
95 people liked it
“You're so beautiful," said Alice. "I'm afraid of looking at you and not knowing who you are."
"I think that even if you don't know who I am someday, you'll still know that I love you."
"What if I see you, and I don't know that you're my daughter, and I don't know that you love me?"
"Then, I'll tell you that I do, and you'll believe me.”
—
69 people liked it
More quotes…
"I think that even if you don't know who I am someday, you'll still know that I love you."
"What if I see you, and I don't know that you're my daughter, and I don't know that you love me?"
"Then, I'll tell you that I do, and you'll believe me.”

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