
In My Year Off: Recovering Life After a Stroke, Robert McCrum recounts the ordeal of his brain injury, recovery, and rehabilitation. In his case, it took about a year to be able to feel comfortable with his speech, physical limitations, and fatigue. In this time, he experienced many emotions, despite all the professional help and the support of family and friends. Admitting that he could no longer maintain the hectic pace of life before his stroke may have been his most difficult concession.
In his book, McCrum includes what he has learned about stroke and its often unrecognized tendency to debilitate young as well as old. Using his diary, which he wrote with his good right hand, and the diary his new wife started after the stroke, he tells a story that will interest not only other stroke victims and their families but also readers who enjoy well-written memoirs. It should still be in many public libraries.
Thanks to Citizen Reader for the recommendation. I read most of it during one day of flying.
McCrum, Robert. My Year Off: Recovering Life After a Stroke. W. W. Norton, 1998. ISBN 0393046567
1 comment:
I'm so, so glad you liked it, Rick. It's a perfect book to take on a plane--slim, and very very hard to put down. Although don't you find yourself worrying just a bit about what horrific health stuff might be around the corner for any of us at any given moment? I had a little shiver myself after I was done with the book.
Safe travels!
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