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A writer's witty and surprisingly optimistic account of learning to
live with Parkinson's disease. When he was sixty-five, Francois
Gravel was diagnosed with Parkinson's disease, upending the old age
he had imagined for himself. As a way of contemplating his new life
with a degenerative illness, he turned to what he knew best and
loved most: writing. Gravel immersed himself in research on
Parkinson's, exploring its medical history and treatments and
paying close attention to the changes he experienced, all in
service of learning how to best manage his symptoms throughout the
advancement of this incurable disease. With a lightness of touch
that belies a difficult subject (he imagines Dr. Parkinson as a
military man who has set up camp in his brain), Gravel shares what
he has learned in a memoir that is at once charming, serious, and
moving. He writes, "For a long time, I believed that Parkinson's
was a disease. Now, I realize it's a philosophy course." Colonel
Parkinson in Charge is, in some ways, the companion text for this
course, engaging with and demystifying a daunting subject to help
readers better understand life with Parkinson's disease.
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