This is the classic text on Alzheimer’s. It’s now a decade old, but reads like it was written yesterday. Shenk tells us how the disease was discovered, how it develops in the brain and how it plays out in the daily lives of patients.
I read this within a month of my father’s diagnosis of advanced second stage dementia, and I’ve never been so comforted by a book. Even now, a few years later, I occasionally take The Forgetting down from the shelf and hold it. I read a few pages. I feel secure with it, I’m in the hands of a skilled, trustworthy and empathic writer.
Reading the book the first time, I was electrified to recognize in my father almost every symptom Shenk described. At the same time I was soothed, because I understood that it wasn’t my father who was so bizarre, it was the disease playing out in his hippocampus, amygdala and temporal lobes. To me it was a relief to know that his brain was going bad in an entirely common way: that he was not, if you will, a strange human being, but entirely normal for a patient with Alzheimer’s.
David Shenk is the ideal journalist, sympathetic without the least hint of sentimentality. His prose is perfectly crafted, never an awkward sentence, with an ideal balance of exposition and narrative. That is, he gives us technical explanations about the disease, but we’re never far from the stories of a lively set of characters. We hear about Frau Auguste D., the original dementia patient of Alois Alzheimer, and Ronald Reagan, and Ralph Waldo Emerson and Jonathan Swift, two writers who suffered extreme memory loss and the inability to make sense of even the words they’d written themselves. It’s a richly peopled world, and Shenk makes it clear that this is a timeless disease, one that has been with us always.
I was surprised by the Acknowledgments section of the book, which goes on for three full pages and names a hundred people. You can see there how much research went into the book. But while reading it, I felt as if Shenk had sat down and typed it out without the least effort. Like a great athlete, he makes the job look effortless.