
Forever Today
A Memoir Of Love And Amnesia
$47.02
- Paperback
400 pages
- Release Date
1 December 2005
Summary
The man who lost his memory - the moving true story of an English musician crippled by total amnesia, by his wife.
Clive Wearing has one of the most extreme cases of amnesia ever known. In 1985, a virus completely destroyed a part of his brain essential for memory, leaving him trapped in a limbo of the constant present. Every conscious moment is for him as if he has just come round from a long coma, an endlessly repeating loop of awakening.
A brilliant conductor and BBC music …
Book Details
| ISBN-13: | 9780552771696 |
|---|---|
| ISBN-10: | 0552771694 |
| Author: | Deborah Wearing |
| Publisher: | Transworld Publishers Ltd |
| Imprint: | Corgi Books |
| Format: | Paperback |
| Number of Pages: | 400 |
| Release Date: | 1 December 2005 |
| Weight: | 282g |
| Dimensions: | 198mm x 130mm x 25mm |
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Critics Review
This is a harrowing, haunting and heartening book - a loss-story which is also a love story. It takes us deep inside the question of what it means to be human.
This is a harrowing, haunting and heartening book - a loss-story which is also a love story. It takes us deep inside the question of what it means to be human. – Andrew Motion
Sometimes terrifying, sometimes very funny, and always deeply moving, Deborah Wearing’s beautifully written testament to a love that survives all the ravages of her husband’s amnesia is a book to seize the heart. – Lindsay Clarke, author of the Whitbread winning The Chymical Wedding
A remarkable book: absorbing, moving and humbling. – Fay Weldon
Loving, terrifying and often extremely funny, an astonishing voyage into the very heart of what makes us human. – Deborah Moggach
I had the privilege of filming a documentary about Deborah and Clive and like the rest of the crew I was immediately struck with the extraordinary patience and affection with which Deborah dealt with this appalling ordeal. In Forever Today she takes us further than ever into this remarkable experience. – Jonathan Miller
‘This is a harrowing story of a human tragedy. Harrowing yet uplifting, for it portrays the indefatigable human spirit of two people grappling with an unprecedented and shattering dilemma. A sensitive and deeply moving account, a heart rending love story - but unlike any other ever told’ – Jack Ashley (Rt. Hon. Lord Ashley of Stoke)
‘A compelling, poignant and exquisitely written account of a young woman reaching into the dark empty spaces of her husband’s damaged brain and finding love within the limitations of his brilliant but fractured mind. It is the most dramatic description of “the abyss of non-being” since Oliver Sacks’ Awakenings’ – Marjorie Wallace, founder of SANE
‘Overwhelmingly moving…Her harrowing book is a description of utterly unselfish love. It also raises scary questions about what exactly makes us human.’ – Val Hennessy * Daily Mail *
‘An extraordinary story of constancy in love, and Deborah Wearing tells in brilliantly.’ * Evening Standard *
‘Delivers a message of hope about human identity. It is similar to the moral drawn by John Bayley after his wife, Irish Murdoch, was struck down by Alzheimer’s and it is this: ‘Clive was living evidence that you could lost almost everything you ever knew about yourself and still be yourself.’ * Mail on Sunday *
About The Author
Deborah Wearing
Deborah Wearing campaigned for specialist services for brain-injured people and helped found a national charity, the Amnesia Association (merged in 1991 with Headway). She now works as a communications officer in the NHS.
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