From Publishers Weekly Cartoonist and writer Becker (All I Need to Know I Learned from My Cat) sloughed off her repeated seizures as stress-related and lived with the strangeness of periodic episodes for three and half years, until a friend witnessed an attack in May 1999. Becker finally sought medical testing and underwent brain surgery. Her memoir loosely brackets the year around her procedure, from the initial diagnosis to the long, slow recovery, when unpredicted side effects interfered with her speech and even her thought processes. As Becker's healing slogs along at a snail's pace, she wonders, "Up until now, I didn't know things were missing until I went looking for them.... What about the things I don't think to look for?" Such problems assailed the essence of Becker's talents for being funny and easily expressing herself through words and drawing. Her struggle to recuperate has a profound effect on relationships and changes her own expectations about being a friend, lover and family member. As anyone might, Becker asks herself, "What if my life is a life I don't want to live?" But with the help of others and her slowly returning sense of humor, she eventually recreates a life she recognizes as her own, one in which she even completes a strenuous AIDS fund-raising bike ride and begins a competitive writing fellowship. Becker's deeply personal and surprisingly funny account intersperses text with such whimsical additions as Becker's "Cardiac Exercise Tolerance" and kooky cartoons. Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. From Booklist To say that Becker, the author-illustrator of the best-seller All I Need to Know, I Learned from My Cat (1990), has a funny way of looking at things would be an understatement. Quick quips and a deft hand are her stock-in-trade, her peculiar perspective defining not only her life but also her livelihood. The diagnosis that the intermittent seizures she'd been experiencing were the result of a mass on her brain that would require surgical removal left Becker with one fear: after the operation, will I still be me? Becker's hilarious, hell-raising, and frequently heart-wrenching account of her johnny-gowned journey through the medical maze of MDs, MRIs, and HMOs is joyous testament to the fact that she made it out not only alive but with all her essential, irrepressible Becker-ness still intact. Comically accompanied by keepsake notes, clippings, and her own inimitable cartoons, Becker's mirthful memoir should be required reading for anyone who has ever been seriously ill; might one day become seriously ill; knows someone who was, is, or might be seriously ill; or all of the above. Carol HaggasCopyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved See all Editorial Reviews
發表於2024-12-25
I Had Brain Surgery, What's Your Excuse? 2024 pdf epub mobi 電子書 下載
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I Had Brain Surgery, What's Your Excuse? 2024 pdf epub mobi 電子書 下載