Press reviews for: Losing Clive to Younger Onset Dementia
Mental Health Nursing
This book is as engaging and enlightening as it is poignant and tragic, I personally could not put it down, I was so drawn to the heady mixture of its compelling human story, coupled with an easy, conversational readability. This book belongs to the burgeoning genre in mental health writing of client/user (or in this case, carer) narrative, and adds in no little way to that body of authority, especially covering the much less heralded arena (both clinically and in terms of publicity) of younger onset dementia.
Nursing Standard
Clive's wife Helen lays bare each raw aspect of her husband's condition and treatment: the tardy arrival of a proper diagnosis, the way Clive was shedding his life skills just as their children were acquiring theirs, the bewildering prejudices of the benefits system and the grief of having to find long-term care for him outside the home. Heartfelt, yet unsentimental, the result is a rare and illuminating account of trying to live and cope with this shattering condition. For anyone trying to understand the problems of dementia in younger people, this excellent book should be the first thing on their reading list.