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Paperback My Year Off: Recovering Life After a Stroke Book

ISBN: 0767904001

ISBN13: 9780767904001

My Year Off: Recovering Life After a Stroke

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

On the morning of July 29, 1995, Robert McCrum -- 42 years old, just two weeks newly married, at the top of his profession as one of British publishing's most admired editors, in what he thought was... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Autobiography--Recovering Life After Stroke

MY YEAR OFF, Recovering Life After a Stroke By Robert McCrumI understand the frustration of Robert McCrum trying to reach a telephone when he succeeded he found that he could barely make himself understood. I went through the same thing, but I was lucky enough that I was with my wife when the stroke occurred and although I couldn't talk I was put in an ambulance, took to the hospital and was under a doctor care within 40 minutes. Robert McCrum's stroke was much more severer that mine. He was hours getting to a doctor with his condition getting worse all the time...Actually, this book is a very good autobiography of Mr. McCrum's life thought his stroke and recovery; although he is still recovering I am sure. And an interesting life it was and will continue to be. This book will be very useful to the members of my stroke club. Now, I will read the rest of his books. This one is worth five stars to me.

brutally honest

This book will help stoke victims, no matter the age, and their loved ones get the real facts, there is no watering down here. My Year Off tells us that stroke victims can make a come back, but it is mighty hard, like I said, no watering down here. As the readers learn of Robert McCrumb's story they will feel as if they are traveling the same journey and experiencing the same emotions as he. When Robert McCrumb awoke the morning of July 29 in 1995 he was unable to move. At the age of 42 he had a severe stroke. As Robert thrashed around in bed unable to sit upright, he wished Sarah; his wife of just 2 months was with him. He didn't experienced anxiety about his condition, just irritation and puzzlement. When a stroke occurs the brain suffers a hemorrhage infarct; the body experiences a colossal disturbance of its innate sensory equilibrium. Robert changed over night from a walking, talking person into an incontinent carcass, unable to make any sense out of his body. He kept passing out and wetting all over himself. As he recuperated his mornings consented of Sarah showing up at eight in the morning with a tiny cup with a laxative type drink and fresh clothes. She also brought him the days post and the British newspapers, her addiction not his. Then he would be wheeled off by the nurses to have a bath, that was a laborious and exhausting process during which he tried to forget that the nurses were literally manhandling him moving him in and out of a wheel chair specially designed for use in the bath room. Woven through the book are excerpts of Robert and Sarah's diaries, the reader is given a glimpse into their raw feelings and emotions as they go through this tragedy. The reader will hear the self-doubt the patient goes through as to whether they will survive or what will become of them, and the depression that they go through. There are so many ranges of feelings in this one, it rates high on emotions. I found the book open and honest concerning strokes and their victims. It's the kind of book we need on the market to keep us informed. This is an excellent book, one worth reading whether there is a stroke victim in your family or not. It's worth being informed, you will not be sorry.

Survivor and wife tell life after stroke survival

Robert McCrum wrote his autobiography so I don't have to write the same book. As a right brain survivor (when I just turned 51 years old), I found myself saying, "yes" at the beginning and end of each chapter. The diary by the wife, Sarah make this a love story.

For stroke victims under 60, and their families and friends

Mr. McCrum, recently pronounced a completely healthy person, has an "insult to the brain" in his forties, and this book chronicles his thoughts and progress from the stroke onward, with sidetracks back to his "former" life, and how he deals with that vs. his "new" life as a stroke victim. For those of us who thought stroke only happened to our elderly parents, and don't quite know how to approach the situation when it affects our contemporaries (more frequently than we might like to think), this book is a good insight into what our friends might be going through, and what they will go through in the recovery period ... the effects of stroke are, of course, most difficult for the patient, but the friends and families also have a lot to think about and understand. I thought that the questions this book raises provide a lot of guidance for the things that one needs to think of, as well as an insight into what your friend might be dealing with. Very valuable from the perspective of the friends/family -- I await my friend's reaction as the patient, altho cannot help but think that it might be of interest because there seems to be a dearth of information about what is happening/could happen at a younger age, altho it is, in fact, rather common. I would highly recommend this book for people who know people in, say, their forties or fifties, who have had stroke -- it's quite a different issue than confronting it in your parents or elderly relatives, and we probably all need more the more specific information about what stroke is and isn't that this book provides.

A book of hope, a lifeline for young stroke victrims

McCrum's story is one which every young stroke victim will need to read. His book is one of those where you only need to read the cover and blurb to know it's the book you've been looking for.And so it is for every young stroke victim - read the first few lines and you know this man is telling your story.He echoes every anguished cry from those of us who, like him, were struck down in the prime of our lives and as we follow his slow road to recovery, his experiences, day by day, thought by thought, provides an invaluable sense of companionship, an alleviation of the terrible loneliness and isolation that often tends to overwhelm. His story is also a testimony of how the love and commitment of another is crucial in our recovery. To those who are caring for young stroke victims, the book is an encouragement as carers too, often feel at a loss when faced daily with a loved one's anguish, despair and mood swings. No need to go to a therapist, buy the book.
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