I've
discussed memory difficulties a few times on the blog in the hope
that it helps others who have similar afflictions- perhaps those
dealing with the aftermath of an Acquired Brain Injury
(ABI).
One
of the struggles I face conflictingly comes with something I enjoy-
stories. Following the plot in a book or film can be a massive issue,
meaning I don't always understand what's going on, or that I don't
rate a book or film as highly as most other people. Sometimes,
though, a story can make perfect sense, and I can follow the plot
through to the end. I remember being able to predict most of the
twists in The DaVinci Code, for example. (That's when you know a book
is predictable tosh- when it's clear to someone with short term
memory difficulties what needs to happen to push the story on. Sorry
Mr. Brown, but a brain-damaged special needs bloke can tell what's
coming next.)
I
recently read Watchmen, Alan Moore and Dave Gibbons' epic superhero
graphic novel. Like many other good tales, it isn't so easy to
predict the plot. It's a weighty, generously long book about a
disbanded group of ageing superheroes, brought back together after
some of them are murdered.
Most
graphic novels I can sit and read in one go- due to this book's size
(plus a lack of entry into my diary about stuff I'd apparently agreed
to do) I read this in chunks over the course of a couple of weeks.
That didn't help my understanding. But the smaller backstories, the
standalone scenes and the creative offshoots- 'reprinted' newspaper
articles, interviews, diary entries and the like- really establish
character and circumstances. Some are so detailed that you're left
wondering how much of this is factual (zoological info relating to
animal behaviour is, and how the heroes adopt certain traits isn't;
details of old comics also aren't).
The
point is, individual segments I can follow, except when past chapters
are alluded to. The overarching story I usually struggle to follow,
so I resort to Wikipedia's synopsis to fill in the gaps.
There's
2 types of forgetting something- one is where the memory is there,
but it isn't accessible until the information is presented again.
Let's say you read the synopsis, and you think, oh yeah, I
remember that now. The other is
where you read the synopsis and you check the title to see if you're
definitely on the right page. Did I even read that part? I
have no recollection. Reading
the synopsis of Watchmen, I had both of those thoughts.
Watchmen
won The Hugo Award, 'science fiction’s most prestigious
award.'
It's great, and I should probably read it again before trying out the
film (which, predictably, isn't on Netflix).
When
you have memory difficulties, you might not have a total
understanding of what you're reading, but your gut still tells you
whether you're reading something outstanding, and that's what you
pick up from Watchmen.
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