“This collection is an important contribution to scholarship. It is unique in taking a first-hand account of the experience of moving into a continuing-care community, and then offering commentaries on that account from several critical perspectives.”
— Amanda Peeples, Senior Research Associate, Center for Aging Studies
“Readers will be drawn to this book for its clarity and candidness. It will appeal to people of all ages, but especially to the large cohort of readers aging into later life and facing important choices about their own care and that of their partners.”
— Barbara Frey Waxman, author of To Live in the Center of the Moment: Literary Autobiographies of Aging
“Forced into an assisted living facility by her husband's ill health, a woman reflects on her transition from a vibrant, independent, and scholarly life to one that is quieter, slower, and that takes up considerably less space.”
“We Americans prize independence, but for many elderly people, the price they pay for independence is loneliness and worthlessness. The Big Move is a fascinating attempt to marry personal experience with academic analysis to help us all reconceive of one option for later-life living. Moving to a continuing care retirement community need not be viewed as a withdrawal from life, but rather as a new platform to manage one’s infirmities at the same time as one uses one’s skills.”
— Huffington Post
“This is a remarkable book about finding the right place to age. It uses a single true story, refracted through personal experience and multiple forms of expertise, to say as much as piles of data. You’ll want to read it if you’re looking for clear advice about the big move into continuing care, assisted living, even a nursing home. And it’s appealing for anyone along the life course making “a big move.” This book gives the perspective that is so often missing. It’s a story not often told and too often dreaded. It tackles the broader social issue of how to age well and treat elders well on an irresistibly human scale. ”
— Sally Chivers, Professor of English Literature, Trent University
“We have very few accounts of gerontologists who have grown old, and never before a memoir by a gerontologist who moved into a long-term care facility. This book is not only a first, but is a remarkable and riveting account of challenges all of us must contemplate. The author's own story is amplified by insights from other contributors to this volume, which altogether make it memorable and compelling. Highly recommended.”
— Rick Moody, retired Vice President for Academic Affairs, AARP
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