Ten-year-old Foster Sumner is a lot like most other youngsters his age. He loves playing with his soldiers and listening to his father's stories. The family has various rituals such as weekend pancake breakfasts, and there is much love and laughter in the house. But everything changes as his father becomes increasingly forgetful, unable to remember the stories he once told and eventually not even recognizing the family dog, Geraldine. It's clear from the start that Foster's father has Alzheimer's, but the speed with which the disease advances is shocking. By turns heartbreaking and humorous, this account of how one family copes with such a health challenge is honest and thoughtfully written, revealing just how frustrating it is to watch a loved one no longer able to take care of himself or remember the things that once had been so important to him. The author has captured the denial, the conflicts, the confusion, and the toll Alzheimer's takes on the caregivers as well as its victims. Fortunately for Foster's family, they have some assistance from various social agencies and suggestions such as putting post-its on various objects to help his father remember, but life will never be the same again. Some readers may become angry at Foster's mother because she is so clueless and angry at times, but again, those seem to be honest reactions to what is happening to the world around her. As anyone familiar with this disease knows, it can leave caregivers especially frustrated by what's happening and there could be an inclination to tkae that frustration out on the patient. While I would have liked a little more discussion of Foster's behavior at school as things at home worsen, it was also clear that the young boy wanted to be included in those so-called "adult" conversations about his father. While the ending is not exactly hopeful--and how could it be?--at the very least, it offers closure and some acceptance of how things are going to be no and a brief, very brief respite from all the confusion and conflict swirling around the family.