The Oldie

Saving graces

Wemmick’s Aged Parent in Dickens’s Great Expectations, beaming by the fire and enjoying his son’s jovial banter despite being stone deaf, remains the template for a contented and cared-for old age. But we read few such scenarios today. We read only of the high cost of care, the scarcity of carers and a post-pandemic picture of locked-down loneliness.

‘Who cares?’ has become a huge question. Richard Bates, having cared for his own father, has edited a collection of carers’ tales, Who Cares?: The Joys and Challenges of Unpaid Carers. Most unpaid carers are spouses or offspring and Bates asked a dozen of them to write their stories.

They are rivetingly candid. They tell tales of small tyrannies, bathroom horrors, mulish sulks and nocturnal needs, twice as demanding as child-rearing. But also of the gratifying aftermath: guilt assuaged, duty fulfilled.

Diana and George Melly, the ebullient jazz musician and writer,

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from The Oldie

The Oldie5 min read
Do Mention The War
Never go back. Or, then again, cast aside any such thinking and, like a famous rock star, book the venues, load up the vans and hit the road one more time. John Cleese isn’t a rock star and isn’t exactly hitting the road. But he’s certainly reaching
The Oldie1 min read
The Oldie
Editor Harry Mount Sub-editor Penny Phillips Art editor Michael Hardaker Supplements editor Charlotte Metcalf Editorial assistant Amelia Milne Publisher James Pembroke Patron saints Jeremy Lewis, Barry Cryer At large Richard Beatty Our Old Master Dav
The Oldie3 min read
I'm Dying To Cure The Cost-of-living Crisis
I’m too much of a Catholic convent girl to be persuaded by the arguments favouring euthanasia – now called ‘assisted dying’. But if I were to be tempted by the campaign advanced so successfully by Esther Rantzen, the point that might lure me is money

Related Books & Audiobooks