Halpern, Sue. Can't Remember What I Forgot:
The Good News from the Front Lines of Memory Research. Harmony: Crown. May
2008. c.272p. index. ISBN 978-0-307-40674-3. $24. SCI
Halpern's three-year inquiry into research on memory, aging, and
Alzheimer's disease is an investigation of modern brain science rendered in
creative nonfiction. Halpern gets to know a prominent neuroscientist, subjects
herself to multiple tests (from paper-and-pencil tests to nuclear brain
imaging), visits businesses involved in the quixotic race for memory-fixing
drugs, and attends the Memory Olympics. She explains in plain English what
science has discovered about learning and memory, what is currently agreed to
improve memory, and what remains to be seen. No self-help book writer, Halpern
has published four well-received books (e.g., Four Wings and a Prayer;
Migrations to Solitude) and written for the New York Times, the New York Review
of Books, and Slate magazine; she is frank and funny about her own fears and
memory lapses and gently debunks memory-boosting fads, leaving the reader with
few suggestions of what the ordinary person can do. Her book documents (with
references) the great strides that have been made and holds out hope for real
treatments for Alzheimer's and age-related memory loss. Educational, fabulously
well written, and on a hot topic. Highly recommended for both public and
academic libraries. [Halpern is married to nature writer Bill
McKibben—Ed.]—Nancy Fontaine, Dartmouth Coll. Lib., Hanover, NH

