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The Complications: On Going Insane in America

(Hardback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

The Complications: On Going Insane in America

Contributors:

By (Author) Emmett Rensin

ISBN:

9780063057227

Publisher:

HarperCollins Publishers Inc

Imprint:

HarperOne

Publication Date:

4th September 2024

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

General

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Other Subjects:

Memoirs

Dewey:

616.8980092

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Hardback

Number of Pages:

352

Dimensions:

Width 152mm, Height 229mm

Weight:

454g

Description


An unflinching, rare account of living with severe mental illness that is also a bold commentary on how we misunderstand this often debilitating disease.

The Complications is an intimate portrait of what its like to live with schizoaffective disorder of the bipolar type as well as a biting, revelatory critique of Americas mental health culture. Emmett Rensin has written and edited articles for major national media outlets, and taught writing and literature at prestigious schools. But he has also lost jobs and friends, been hospitalized and institutionalized, and cycled through a daunting combination of medications. With scorching honesty, he reflects on his messy, fragile attempt to live his life, his periods of grace, and his near misses with disaster and death.

Going beyond the usual peans against stigma and for understanding, Rensin confronts the dysfunction in current mental health narratives, contrasting what he calls mental illness high culturein which we affirm the prevalence of anxiety and encourage regular therapy, insisting that the mentally ill arent dangerous or even weirdwith even progressive societys inability to contend with people with more severe forms of mental illness: those people we pass on the street talking to themselves, those caught in a loop between hospitals and prisons, or even those who we cannot tolerate in our own schools, offices, and lives, including himself.

With raw honesty, Rensin invites us into every aspect of his life, from what its like see four different psychiatrists in one year and the nature of psychotic breaks to a harrowing diary that logs exactly what happens when he stops taking his medication and the unexpected kinship he discovers with an incarcerated spree killer with schizophrenia. Going beyond pure memoir, he reflects on the uncertain science of diagnosis, the nature of art about and by the insane, political activism, and the history of madness, from the asylum to the academy.

A compelling, often devastating, blend of memoir, cultural commentary, and history, The Complications elevates the conversation around mental illness and challenges us to reexamine what we think we know about what is to go insane.

Reviews

"In this raw debut memoir, essayist Rensin interweaves an account of his struggles with schizoaffective bipolar disorder with a cutting examination of American attitudes toward mental health. While the unremitting darkness can be tough to stomach, it's a rousing rebuke to more placid treatments of similar subject matter." -- Publishers Weekly

"An absorbing debut memoir. Rensin's historical overview of psychiatry, examination of the vagaries of diagnosis and therapy, and stark depiction of his own visceral experiences offer unique insight into the meaning of madness." -- Kirkus

"[Rensin's] book is caustic and incisive, never more so than when his readers, curled up neurotypically on our couches, are in his sights: 'You want to know what madness feels like. Why do you believe that I could tell you'" -- Harper's Magazine

"It is an incredible thing to watch Emmett Rensin dismantle the incoherent, platitudinous beliefs well meaning Americans hold around the subject of what they will call, with delicate distance, 'mental illness.' The Complications is so brilliant, fresh, and resistant to clich it eventually led me back to that most familiar idea: the thin line between madness and genius." -- Kerry Howley, author of Bottoms Up and the Devil Laughs

"Remarkably eloquent and deeply felt, The Complications is an irrepressibly beautiful debut that rounds the wounded psyche of the self and society with a deftness so visceral and yet also so subtle it will remind that art is still one of the greatest salves." -- John D'Agata, author of The Making of the American Essay and About a Mountain

"Someone gives you a road map and says, 'Go.' But what if it's a trick map What if it leads you to crash your car on purpose and to see the nurses helping you as actually intent on killing you with knives What happens when you find out the map maker is you and always will be you If you are Emmett Rensin, you write the brilliant and terrifying The Complications. Rensin is walking Didion territory here, with sentences, and fates, as quietly lacerating. And while he himself doesn't put much stock in the madness/genius theory, both are evident here." -- Nancy Rommelmann, author of To the Bridge: A True Story of Motherhood and Murder

Author Bio

Emmett Rensin is a writer. His previous work has appeared in The Atlantic, New Republic, Los Angeles Times, and other major publications.

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