Can't Remember What I Forgot Can't Remember What I Forgot

Can't Remember What I Forgot

The Good News from the Front Lines of Memory Research

    • 4.7 • 3 Ratings
    • $14.99
    • $14.99

Publisher Description

An essential behind-the-scenes foray into the world of cutting-edge memory research that unveils findings about memory loss only now available to general readers.

When Sue Halpern decided to emulate the first modern scientist of memory, Hermann Ebbinghaus, who experimented on himself, she had no idea that after a day of radioactive testing, her brain would become so “hot” that leaving through the front door of the lab would trigger the alarm. This was not the first time while researching Can’t Remember What I Forgot, part of which appeared in The New Yorker, that Halpern had her head examined, nor would it be the last.

Halpern spent years in the company of the neuroscientists, pharmacologists, psychologists, nutritionists, and inventors who are hunting for the genes and molecules, the drugs and foods, the machines, the prosthetics, the behaviors and therapies that will stave off Alzheimer’s and other forms of dementia and keep our minds–and memories–intact. Like many of us who have had a relative or friend succumb to memory loss, who are getting older, who are hearing statistics about our own chances of falling victim to dementia, who worry that each lapse of memory portends disease, Halpern wanted to find out what the experts really knew, what the bench scientists were working on, how close science is to a cure, to treatment, to accurate early diagnosis, and, of course, whether the crossword puzzles, sudokus, and ballroom dancing we’ve been told to take up can really keep us lucid or if they’re just something to do before the inevitable overtakes us.

Beautifully written, sharply observed, and deeply informed, Can’t Remember What I Forgot is a book full of vital information–and a solid dose of hope.

GENRE
Health, Mind & Body
RELEASED
2008
May 6
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
272
Pages
PUBLISHER
Crown
SELLER
Penguin Random House LLC
SIZE
811
KB

More Books by Sue Halpern

A Dog Walks Into a Nursing Home A Dog Walks Into a Nursing Home
2013
Four Wings and a Prayer Four Wings and a Prayer
2001
The Etiquette of Illness The Etiquette of Illness
2008
Migrations to Solitude Migrations to Solitude
1992
Introducing . . . Sasha Abramowitz Introducing . . . Sasha Abramowitz
2015
Summer Hours at the Robbers Library Summer Hours at the Robbers Library
2018