Reviews
Tangles is simply a fine and touching book. As the rateof Alzheimer's continues to increase as the population ages, Tanglesjoins Jeffrey Moore's novel The Memory Artists and Sarah Polley's filmAway from Her at the head of a list of illuminating and much-neededartistic responses., "The story has adefinite place in the literature available to persons who have to deal withthis terrible tragedy. The format (a graphic novel) is fresh and will appeal tothe younger generation who are just beginning tocome to gripswiththis crisis. Sarah describes very clearly many of the variousproblems that occur with each stage of the illness. She is very honest abouther reactions and feelings as well as her attempts to cope with them. There aremany lessons for others to learn but the biggest lesson is that it is OK to havereactions, feelingsand frustrations that are not always "correct" as onewatches a loved-one's progress. I think that the graphic novel tells the storyin a more vivid and personal way thanmost bookscould possibly do Iknow from my years of experience that the novel will be very helpful toothers dealing with Alzheimer's.", "The power of this graphic memoir is not that its story about a familydealing with Alzheimer's is so extraordinary, but that it has become soordinary.In her first book, Canadian writer and cartoonist Leavitt shows her motheragreeing to have her experiences with the disease documented because "[m]aybethis will help other families!" And likely it will, letting those experiencingthe dementia of someone they love know what to expect, and to reassure that thetangled emotions they feel in response--anger, frustration, devotion, humor--areinevitable.Though this is primarily an account of the author'sexperiences as her mother becomes all but emotionally unrecognizable, it isalso a narrative spanning two three generations of complicated familydynamics.Leavitt illustrates significant differences between her mother'scloseness with her sisters and how the disease affects those relationships, andthe contrasting tension between the author and her sister.It shows the strainsthat Alzheimer's puts on everything--from the sufferer's well being and sense ofpurpose to a loving marriage to the physical demands of caring for someone whocan no longer care for herself.The narrative is human, honest, loving andoccasionally even funny. "I created this book," Leavitt writes in theintroduction, "to remember her as she was before she got sick, but also toremember her as she was during her illness, the ways in which she wastransformed and the ways in which parts of her endured. As my mother changed, Ichanged too, forced to reconsider my own identity as a daughter and as an adultand to recreate my relationship with my mother."Not simply the story of a disease, but of the flawed, complex, intelligentpeople whose lives it transformed.", Sarah Leavitt uses the medium of comics to tell her story with more economy and power than either words or pictures could muster by themselves. She brings a good eye for the telling detail--the small observations that reveal larger truths--to her memoir of a family in crisis. Tangles is the work of a perceptive, creative, and honest storyteller., Not only a spot-on portrait of the dark comedy and vast sadness that Alzheimer's contains, the book is a fitting tribute to Leavitt's mom., An extraordinarilymoving and vivid account, in text and cartoon-style pictures, of the life anddeath of an Alzheimer's patient., "SaysLeavitt, "Our parentstaught us, as very young children, that language, words, and books belonged tous, that they were exciting and powerful." Pairing words with simply drawn,evocative line art, Leavitt has crafted a glowing, heart-wrenching memorial tothe woman who gave her such a gift. Useful for anyone with an Alzheimer'spatient among family or friends, for health-care professionals, and for graphicarts programs as an example of how simple art can tell a powerful story. Sofar, the only published Alzheimer's-related graphic novel-and highlyrecommended.", "The power of this graphic memoir is not that its story about a familydealing with Alzheimer's is so extraordinary, but that it has become soordinary.In her first book, Canadian writer and cartoonist Leavitt shows her motheragreeing to have her experiences with the disease documented because "[m]aybethis will help other families!" And likely it will, letting those experiencingthe dementia of someone they love know what to expect, and to reassure that thetangled emotions they feel in response-anger, frustration, devotion, humor-areinevitable.Though this is primarily an account of the author'sexperiences as her mother becomes all but emotionally unrecognizable, it isalso a narrative spanning two three generations of complicated familydynamics.Leavitt illustrates significant differences between her mother'scloseness with her sisters and how the disease affects those relationships, andthe contrasting tension between the author and her sister.It shows the strainsthat Alzheimer's puts on everything-from the sufferer's well being and sense ofpurpose to a loving marriage to the physical demands of caring for someone whocan no longer care for herself.The narrative is human, honest, loving andoccasionally even funny. "I created this book," Leavitt writes in theintroduction, "to remember her as she was before she got sick, but also toremember her as she was during her illness, the ways in which she wastransformed and the ways in which parts of her endured. As my mother changed, Ichanged too, forced to reconsider my own identity as a daughter and as an adultand to recreate my relationship with my mother."Not simply the story of a disease, but of the flawed, complex, intelligentpeople whose lives it transformed.", "SaysLeavitt, "Our parentstaught us, as very young children, that language, words, and books belonged tous, that they were exciting and powerful." Pairing words with simply drawn,evocative line art, Leavitt has crafted a glowing, heart-wrenching memorial tothe woman who gave her such a gift. Useful for anyone with an Alzheimer'spatient among family or friends, for health-care professionals, and for graphicarts programs as an example of how simple art can tell a powerful story. Sofar, the only published Alzheimer's-related graphic novel--and highlyrecommended.", Beautiful detailed drawings capture perfectly the joy, frustration,sense of loss, humor, and poignancy of dealing with Alzheimer's.I welcome this book, as compelling, instructive, and yet enormouslycomforting too., "Midge Leavitt beginsshowing symptoms of Alzheimer's in her mid-50s. Her handwriting starts towobble, she loses herself in familiar parts of town, and strange,"blankety-blank" headaches shift around in her skull. Losing wordsand stories proves particularly debilitating for a woman who was once soenthused by them-with her husband, fellow teacher Rob, she "built a lifeof books and art and creativity". Leavitt responds in kind in thisheartbreaking memoir, which follows her mother's gradual decline and herfamily's reaction to it. Her simple line drawings are rarely fascinating inthemselves but they serve the story well, capturing facial expressions withsubtle brevity and showing the subtext behind brave or cruel words as Leavitt'svoice stretches from calm rationalizing to an anguished wail and back. Starkdetails-accounts of tidying up after a woman whose body is no longer her ownand trying to communicate with a mother who can barely recognize her family-are married with warm, funny recollections of Jewish-Canadian life.", [Leavitt's] drawings . . . put me in mind of Roz Chast . . . [her]skill, economy of line, and efficiency of vocabulary give you plotand interwoven characters, humor, pathos, comedy, and tragedyenough for 500 pages of prose.