Stephanie Jane reviewed Still Alice by Lisa Genova
Film version cover, grrr!
3 stars
There's a small bookshelf in the entrance to Chain Bridge Honey Farm which has a reasonable selection of second-hand books for sale. I spotted a good condition copy of Still Alice for 50p and decided to give it a read as the novel has been so popular since its film version was released. My first problem with the book however was caused by this duality. The Alice on the cover bears no physical resemblance to the Alice in the text, so there were a couple of significant points where I didn't immediately identify the small woman with dark curly hair described in the text with the straight auburn haired woman pictured. It does annoy me when publishers set their integrity aside to cash in like this! There must have other film images that would have been suitable and accurate to the prose. (Rant over!)
The novel itself is OK. Alice …
There's a small bookshelf in the entrance to Chain Bridge Honey Farm which has a reasonable selection of second-hand books for sale. I spotted a good condition copy of Still Alice for 50p and decided to give it a read as the novel has been so popular since its film version was released. My first problem with the book however was caused by this duality. The Alice on the cover bears no physical resemblance to the Alice in the text, so there were a couple of significant points where I didn't immediately identify the small woman with dark curly hair described in the text with the straight auburn haired woman pictured. It does annoy me when publishers set their integrity aside to cash in like this! There must have other film images that would have been suitable and accurate to the prose. (Rant over!)
The novel itself is OK. Alice Hoffman is a Harvard University psychology professor specialising in language, who begins to lose her own ability to communicate as she develops early onset Alzheimer's disease. Oh, the (frequently hammered home) irony! Genova also piles on emotional triggers by including a historic family tragedy and a forthcoming possible birth so this could have been a real tear-jerker in the right hands. I didn't feel that any of the characters leapt off the page to me though. Alice's husband, John, is an unsympathetic creation seeming mostly to exist to spout medical information to the reader.
For me, this story and the affluent family at its centre were just too removed from reality, despite the novel telling a story that must have all-too-real elements for many families worldwide. There have been a number of dementia-related novels launched over the past year or so and, for a nuanced and deeply understanding portrayal of the disease and its harrowing effects, I would recommend Elisabeth Is Missing over Still Alice anyday.