Riding the Elephant is a wild journey--funny, tender, and frightening at the 
								same time.  Goff captures and delivers the fragile moments and the bold 
								outline of familial bonds and challenges.  What a ride! 
								 
								Catherine Van Noy, columnist | 
						 
						
							
								
									
										
											 
											 
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											Beyond Forgetting: Poetry and Prose about Alzheimer’s Disease, ed. Holly J. Hughes (2009 Kent State Univ Press)  has been awarded an IPPY 
											Silver Medal in the category of Aging/Death and Dying.  One of its 
											chapters is excerpted from Diane Porter Goff's Riding the Elephant.  
											Congratulations to 
											Ms. Hughes and all of her contributors. | 
									 
								 
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							Riding the Elephant: An Alzheimer's Journey takes the reader into 
							a landscape where no one goes by choice, yet a place where five million 
							Americans reside.  A memoir that traces the steps of two sisters and their 
							families as they accompany their mother into uncharted territory, it is a story 
							filled with pathos, humor, unforgetable characters and a glimpse into the 
							transformational power of the human heart.  It provides guidance, 
							compassion and company to those who are walking similar paths. 
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Click to purchase the printed book. 
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										Author: Diane Porter Goff 
										Publisher: Dreamsplice 
										Pub Date: January 2019 
										SECOND EDITION ISBN: 978-0-9761559-7-3 
										LCCN: 2018963166 
										Soft Cover; 134 pages 
										Price: $13.98 
										 
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									 Review from ForeWord Reviews (Nov/Dec 2009): 
									Diane Porter Goff, author and poet, eloquently shares her memories of the 
									frustrations felt in caring for her mother, the hurt that arises unbidden for 
									unknown slights that still have the capacity to wound, and the guilt over 
									thoughts that come unbidden. Readers will relate to the helplessness felt in 
									searching for knowledgeable, caring help and the inability to fully protect 
									“mama” from the outside world of cold examination rooms and nonchalant medical 
									providers. It isn’t all despair, though, as Goff also describes the undeniably 
									comical as well as the joy felt in never-forgotten moments spent in her mother’s 
									presence. Goff’s memoir leaves readers with an empathetic understanding of those 
									who are “riding the elephant.” Robin 
									Phillips, BSN, RN |  
								
									 
									Review by Philip Lee Williams: 
									...in the end, one feels not depressed but genuinely ennobled for having 
									taken this journey with Diane and her mother. |  
								
									 
									Feature Article in the Roanoke Times by Kevin Kittredge: 
									...the response has been very good.  "Almost every day, 
									I get an e-mail or I get a letter.  Someone has read this book, 
									and it's meant something to them."  One thing people tell her, 
									she says, is that the book makes them laugh.  The myriad heartbreaks 
									chronicled in Riding the Elephant are mingled with lighter scenes... |  
 
Also from Diane Porter Goff 
 
										 
Click to purchase the printed book. 
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								"Her fragile little body sits upright in the water‚ legs stuck straight out like 
								a child’s. Mama has always liked her baths hot and now‚ with old age sitting in 
								her bones‚ she likes them even hotter. Steam rises. Rivulets run down the pink 
								tiles surrounding the tub.... " | 
						 
						
							  
								
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