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Author, journalist, educator
Love in a Time of Caterpillars: A Memoir of Monarchs and Dementia (Forked Road Press, 2024). When the author's husband, Alan, started on his downward spiral into dementia, their work with monarch butterfly conservation gave him a perfect distraction and her an antidote for despair. Their emotional connection as a couple continued throughout his unyielding decline, revived by the recurrence of orange-winged visitors. As his caregiver, Allene came up with practical, creative solutions to preserve both his dignity and her own sanity with each new loss. Loving lies, distraction, crafting workarounds, and turning to her dementia support group are some of the ways she maintained a sense of normality. These takeaways are woven throughout the linked memoir essays, which are often tender, sometimes humorous, and occasionally harrowing. Yet above all, this is a love story and the story of a marriage enhanced by a commitment to monarch butterflies. It is also the unfolding drama of a wife's survival, about how she stealthily introduced caregiving help, squeezed out time for herself, and faced a diagnosis of breast cancer and surgery just as Alan lost the ability to recognize her as his wife. Despite all this, and even in the most frustrating and frightening moments of his illness, the author found gifts of gratitude and abundant reasons to celebrate their shared life.
Aldous Huxley's Hands: His Quest for Perception and the origin and Return of Psychedelic Science (Prometheus Books, 2015). Psychedelics, neuroscience, memoir, and historical biography come together when a journalist finds a lost photograph of Aldous Huxley and discovers a hidden side of the celebrated author of Brave New World and The Doors of Perception.
Through interviews, road trips, and family documents, the author reconstructs a time peaking in mid-1950s Los Angeles when Huxley experimented with psychedelic substances, ran afoul of gatekeepers, and advocated responsible use of such hallucinogens to treat mental illness as well as to achieve states of mind called mystical. Because the author’s father had studied hundreds of hands, including those of schizophrenics, he was invited into Huxley’s research
and discussion circle.This intriguing narrative about the early psychedelic era throws new light on one of the 20thcentury’s foremost intellectuals, showing that his experiments in consciousness presaged pivotal scientific research underway today.