The art of misdiagnosis : a memoir : [surviving my mother's suicide]

by Gayle Brandeis

Hardcover, 2017

Status

Available

Publication

Boston, Massachusetts : Beacon Press, [2017]

Description

"Award-winning novelist and poet Gayle Brandeis's wrenching memoir of her complicated family history and her mother's suicide Gayle Brandeis's mother disappeared just after Gayle gave birth to her youngest child. Several days later, her body was found: she had hanged herself in the utility closet of a Pasadena parking garage. In this searing, formally inventive memoir, Gayle describes the dissonance between being a new mother, a sweet-smelling infant at her chest, and a grieving daughter trying to piece together what happened, who her mother was, and all she had and hadn't understood about her. Around the time of her suicide, Gayle's mother had been working on a documentary about the rare illnesses she thought ravaged her family: porphyria and Ehlers-Danlos syndrome. In The Art of Misdiagnosis, taking its title from her mother's documentary, Gayle braids together her own narration of the charged weeks surrounding her mother's suicide, transcripts of her mother's documentary, research into delusional and factitious disorders, and Gayle's own experience with misdiagnosis and illness (both fabricated and real). Slowly and expertly, The Art of Misdiagnosis peels back the complicated layers of deception and complicity, of physical and mental illness in Gayle's family, to show how she and her mother had misdiagnosed one another. Gayle's memoir is both a compelling search into the mystery of one's own family and a life-affirming story of the relief discovered through breaking familial and personal silences. Written by a gifted stylist, The Art of Misdiagnosis delves into the tangled mysteries of disease, mental illness, and suicide and comes out the other side with grace"--… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member benruth
I never received my copy of this book from LibraryThing; I ended up reading a copy from the actual library. It’s a good story of a family’s struggle to understand and deal with health issues both real and illusory; it is not about suicide as much as it is about life as a family. I read an
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upcoming memoir called _The Bridesmaid’s Daughter_ not long after reading this one, and these would be interesting as companion memoirs...they are very different stories, but they deal with related issues overall.
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LibraryThing member akblanchard
Gayle Brandeis's mother Arlene had always been self-centered and eccentric, but as she grew older she fell into the grip of a full-blown delusional disorder. Her hypochondria and paranoia culminated in an successful suicide attempt days after her daughter gave birth to a late-in-life baby, almost
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as if she were upstaging her. Brandeis writes with compassion about her mother's mental illness and its impact on her as a daughter, especially during the postpartum period when she was simultaneously mourning her mother and welcoming her son. Included also are Brandeis's own teenage experiences with faking illness in order to claim the role of "the sick girl".

Brandeis dwells a little too long on the details of her at-home water birth, but other than that, this is a moving look at a fraught mother-daughter relationship.

Please note that my LibraryThing Early Reviewers copy has not arrived as of the date of the this review. I obtained this book from another source.
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Physical description

253 p.; 23 cm

ISBN

9780807044865
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