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25 Months: A Memoir [Hardcover]

Linda McK. Stewart (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Book Description

July 17, 2004
Jack Stewart was a longtime editor at the New York Times. Linda was the U.S. representative of a French publishing consortium. Theirs was a marriage graced with good luck, a union from which each drew strength and joy in equal measure. In his early seventies, Jack opted for retirement but continued to work as a freelance editor and literary agent. The passing years were enriched by travel, strong family ties, and the delight of friendships.

Illness descended abruptly one October afternoon. Jack, awaking confused and disoriented from a nap, was rushed to the hospital. There the diagnosis was both swift and horrifying: Alzheimer's disease. It was a pronouncement that instantly overwhelmed all other considerations. Against her husband's loss of self-awareness, Linda quickly found she had no preparation, no defense. As his memory vanished, the essence of who he was vanished as well. 25 Months documents the struggle of a husband and wife to navigate the treacherous terrain of illness.

Alzheimer's is being diagnosed with ever-growing frequency. It is a disease of unknown origin, one that for now has no cure. The illness relentlessly and incrementally shreds personality and intellect. Yet every case is distinct, eliciting unique responses from both patient and caregiver. In those responses can be found the core of our character. The author describes the pain as well as the unexpected flashes of joy that came with caring for her failing husband. She describes as well the frustration of coping with a health care system that, despite benign intentions, seems woefully inadequate to meet the needs of Alzheimer's patients.


Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Stewart's second husband, Jack, worked for 34 years as a New York Times editor, launched a respected African news journal and pleasantly retired into a late career as a part-time literary agent. One autumn afternoon, with barely any warning, he began to exhibit undeniable symptoms of Alzheimer's, which changed everything for him and his wife. Stewart's straightforward, deeply felt memoir of the ensuing 25 months couldn't have been an easy story to tell, much less write and rewrite into this solid and often poignant book, but it's a strong narrative testimonial to her husband and his last months. Stewart leaves no doubt of her affection for Jack; her characterization of him nears hagiography. Yet this was a second marriage for both, and there's scant information as to why the first ones failed. Stewart also has considerable experience as a freelance travel writer and draws on that expertise in the book's heart, when her husband's memory has become irrevocably fragmented. For example, some random comment of Jack's connects with Stewart's memories of their travels to the Olduvai Gorge in Tanzania to visit Louis and Mary Leakey. This mixing of Jack's present-day deterioration with Stewart's precise memories begins to promise something more, but the book soon returns to the conventional, month-by-month story of Jack's worsening condition, and the sad, simple story of a solid marriage coming to an end.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Review

Publishers Weekly 2004

June 21, 2004
25 MONTHS
Linda McK. Stewart. Other Press, $22 (288p) ISBN 1-59051-130-1

Stewart's second husband, Jack, worked for 34 years as a New York Times editor, launched a respected African news journal and pleasantly retired into a late career as a part-time literary agent. One autumn afternoon, with barely any warning, he began to exhibit undeniable symptoms of Alzheimer's, which changed everything for him and his wife. Stewart's straightforward, deeply felt memoir of the ensuing 25 months couldn't have been an easy story to tell, much less write and rewrite into this solid and often poignant book, but it's a strong narrative testimonial to her husband and his last months. Stewart leaves no doubt of her affection for Jack; her characterization of him nears hagiography. Yet this was a second marriage for both, and there's scant information as to why the first ones failed. Stewart also has considerable experience as a freelance travel writer and draws on that expertise in the book's heart, when her husband's memory has become irrevocably fragmented. For example, some random comment of Jack's connects with Stewart's memories of their travels to the Olduvai Gorge in Tanzania to visit Louis and Mary Leakey. This mixing of Jack's present-day deterioration with Stewart's precise memories begins to promise something more, but the book soon returns to the conventional, month-by-month story of Jack's worsening condition, and the sad, simple story of a solid marriage coming to an end.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 288 pages
  • Publisher: Other Press; 1St Edition edition (July 17, 2004)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1590511301
  • ISBN-13: 978-1590511305
  • Product Dimensions: 6.3 x 1 x 9.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,272,276 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Razor's Edge, July 16, 2009
This review is from: 25 Months: A Memoir (Hardcover)
Though a usual mark of Alzheimer's is how gradually the disease comes on, not so for Linda Stewart's husband, who wakes one afternoon from a nap, disoriented and barely responsive. The author, thinking he may have had a stroke, calls for an ambulance--only to find, the next morning in the hospital, that there is no "hemispheric damage" or indication of a stroke. Jack Stewart has come down with Alzheimer's, seemingly in the space of a couple of hours.

What a razor's edge we live on--which gives this story its weight. The onset of Jack Stewart's Alzheimer's comes as "a severe, delusionary, psychotic episode"--but the result is much the same as with a patient whose dementia has crept into view over months or even years. From the title we guess the end, that Jack Stewart, previously strong and healthy, will die after 25 months.

The author puts up a valiant struggle to keep her husband at home, to keep him involved. Her "rival" for Jack's attentions becomes sleep: "As soon as breakfast was over, `I think I'll just go lie down for while." Or, "If I left him alone for only the few moments it took to prepare lunch, to attend to the laundry or tidy the kitchen, he would grope to our bed and fall at once into deep sleep."

She doesn't want him to drift off, to give up, to disappear from her life. But of course he's going to. After her valiant struggle she writes a valiant book. She is left with her memories, and we are left with an engaging portrait of a man in his prime, abruptly laid low.
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