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A Stitch of Time: The Year a Brain Injury Changed My Language and Life

e-book


ā€œReaders will be compelled by this illuminating debut memoirā€¦a captivatingā€ (Kirkus Reviews) account of one womanā€™s journey to regain her language and identity after a brain aneurysm steals her ability to communicate.

Lauren Marks was twenty-seven, touring a show in Scotland with her friends, when an aneurysm ruptured in her brain and left her fighting for her life. She woke up in a hospital with serious deficiencies to her reading, speaking, and writing abilities, and an unfamiliar diagnosis: aphasia. This would be shocking news for anyone, but Lauren was a voracious reader, an actress, director, and at the time of the event, pursuing her PhD. At any other period of her life, this diagnosis would have been a devastating blow. But she woke upā€¦different. The way she perceived her environment and herself had profoundly changed, her entire identity seemed crafted around a language she could no longer access. She returned to her childhood home to recover, grappling with a muted inner monologue and fractured sense of self.

Soon after, Lauren began a journal, to chronicle her year following the rupture. A Stitch of Time is the remarkable result, an Oliver Sacksā€“like case study of a brain slowly piecing itself back together, featuring clinical research about aphasia and linguistics, interwoven with Laurenā€™s narrative and actual journal entries that marked her progress. Alternating between fascination and frustration, she relearns and re-experiences many of the things we take for grantedā€”reading a book, understanding idioms, even sharing a ā€œfirst kissā€ā€”and begins to reconcile ā€œThe Girl I Used to Beā€ with ā€œThe Girl I Am Now.ā€ For fans of Brain on Fire and My Stroke of Insight, the deeply personal and powerful A Stitch of Time is an ā€œengrossingā€ (Publishers Weekly) journey of self-discovery, resilience, and hope.