Book Review Club: Silver Linings and Rose Gardens #amreading

In April my readers group chose Psychology as a topic, so I looked for novels about characters with mental illness and decided to share my short reviews for this month’s Book Review Club.

Z cover

Z: A Novel of Zelda Fitzgerald
by Therese Anne Fowler
St. Martin’s Press, 2013

I knew Zelda had mental issues, so I grabbed a copy of this book when it was on sale at Amazon Kindle. I found it quite fascinating.

Zelda Sayre and F. Scott Fitzgerald meet during WWI when he is stationed near Montgomery, Alabama where Zelda lives. She’s pretty and vivacious and a good ballet dancer, and Scott is smitten almost instantly. Her parents, who are from prominent if not wealthy families, aren’t thrilled about this Yankee upstart, but she’s determined to marry him.

Though they clearly loved each other, it wasn’t exactly a marriage made in heaven. Scott was insecure and became jealous of Zelda when she tried to step outside of her wifely role. Her first short stories were published under his name, supposedly because they would earn more money, though I think his ego was threatened also. She couldn’t ignore the economic argument as they consistently lived above their means. He was also a raging alcoholic, which didn’t help her mental state.

As I was reading, it seemed clear to me that she was bipolar, going through manic stages and then depression. In one manic state, she was practicing ballet almost nonstop and hardly eating. She had an episode where she started hallucinating, but I suspect it might have been from dehydration. She was hospitalized and diagnosed with schizophrenia. Psychiatrists now say she was misdiagnosed and was actually bipolar.

I found the book very engaging and enjoyed it although the ending isn’t a happy one. Since they were real people, it’s no secret that they both died relatively young. Zelda’s death was especially tragic, in a fire at a mental hospital. I hope the smoke got her first.

I checked the other two books out of the library, one in audio format and the second as an e-book.

SilverLiningsSilver Linings Playbook
by Matthew Quick
Blackstone Audio, Inc., 2008

I chose this book because I knew there was some kind of mental illness in the book. Written in first person, it’s apparently also a good example of an unreliable narrator. The protagonist is Pat, a 34-year-old man whom we first see in a mental health facility in Maryland that he calls the Bad Place. In the first chapter his mom springs him out of the hospital and takes him home to New Jersey where he gets a new therapist, an Indian-American named Cliff.

Pat struck me as both delusional and suffering from obsessive-compulsive disorder. He misses his wife Nikki, but can’t see her because they are having “apart time”. From the reactions of his family and friends, the reader is pretty sure apart time is never going to end, but Pat maintains the delusion through most of the book. He has mentally blocked what led to him being hospitalized. One of the funniest things is his aversion to the music of Kenny G. He freaks out whenever he hears smooth jazz, even if it’s only in his mind. Later in the book we find out why.

Pat tries to make himself a better person for Nikki, reminding himself to be kind instead of right, but also by exercising compulsively. During their marriage he had gained “ten to seventy pounds” and now he’s slim again and buffed up from all the exercise. He becomes re-aquainted with Tiffany, his best friend’s sister-in-law. They have a strange relationship, but ultimately become friends. Pat is always looking for the silver lining in life. He says he is watching the movie of his life and believes in silver linings and happy endings. The ending is a bit bittersweet, but hopeful. I’m looking forward to watching the movie now. The narration by Ray Porter is excellent.

Rose Garden coverI Never Promised You a Rose Garden
by Hannah Green, aka Joanne Greenberg
Henry Holt and Co., 2010
First published 1964

The book takes place in the 1940’s (I think) and is semi-autobiographical. Greenberg was institutionalized when she was a teen, and her therapist helped to pull her out of her made-up world. In the book, the protagonist’s name is Deborah Blau, who is Jewish and among other slights is bullied by anti-Semitic students.

After a suicide attempt, she is hospitalized and diagnosed with schizophrenia, which sounds right to me. She is socially disengaged, instead retreating to a world in her mind called Yr (pronounced Year). She is lucky when she’s assigned to Dr. Fried, who instead of quibbling with her about the secret world and language, focuses on getting Deb to relate in the real world. She feels that Deb’s obvious intelligence and creativity mean she is sane on some level.

The glimpse into a mental hospital of that era is rather disturbing. Some of the patients suddenly explode into violence. Others urinate on the floor. I suppose nowadays they are all in adult diapers. The title comes from something the doctor says to Deb.

I found the book quite interesting and enlightening. Now I’d like to see the movie, though I’m a little bummed that they Anglicized the Blau family and turned then into the Blakes. I guess that was the “politically correct” thing to do at the time, but it seems jarring now.

I enjoyed all three books. What are you reading? Has anyone watched the TV series Z?

Linda

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Book #Review Club: It Can’t Happen Here by Sinclair Lewis

paperback cover

paperback cover

It’s time for Book Review Club again and my choice this month is It Can’t Happen Here by Sinclair Lewis. I read the audiobook narrated by Grover Gardner.

Sinclair Lewis wrote It Can’t Happen Here about how facism could possibly come to the US in the 1930’s. In his tale, a populist demagogue, Senator Berzelius “Buzz” Windrip, defeats Franklin Roosevelt for the Democratic nomination in 1936 and wins the general election over Republican Walt Trowbridge. Once in office, Buzz replaces our democratic republic with a corporate state and rules with a heavy hand, largely through his private army, the new Minute Men.

The main character is Doremus Jessup, a 60ish newspaper editor in Fort Beulah, Vermont, who opposes the regime, though quietly at first. Tragedy strikes when he goes public with his distaste for the “corpos” and he has to find a way to work underground. His nemesis is Shad LeDue who used to work (none too diligently) as the Jessup’s hired man. In the new regime Shad becomes the district commander of the MM’s.

audiobook cover

audio cover

While I found the book interesting, it is a little slow in places, but gets better toward the end. Though I found the ending unsatisfying, I understand that European fascism was a work in progress when Lewis was writing, and it wasn’t clear if or how it would all end. I enjoyed Grover Gardner’s narration. He did a good job of making the narrator sound like an old-time New Englander without going full nasal Down Easter.

Recommended for followers of current affairs. Authoritarianism seems to be making a comeback in various places around the world, and I found it interesting to compare Lewis’s vision of fascism with contemporary nationalism.

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