This renowned journalist's classic Pulitzer Prize winning
investigation of schizophrenia--now reissued with a new
postscript--follows a flamboyant and fiercely intelligent young
woman as she struggles in the throes of mental illness.
"Sylvia Frumkin" was born in 1948 and began showing signs of
schizophrenia in her teens. She spent the next seventeen years in
and out of mental institutions. In 1978, reporter Susan Sheehan
took an interest in her and, for more than two years, became
immersed in her life: talking with her, listening to her
monologues, sitting in on consultations with doctors--even, for a
period, sleeping in the bed next to her in a psychiatric center.
With Sheehan, we become witness to Sylvia's plight: her psychotic
episodes, the medical struggle to control her symptoms, and the
overburdened hospitals that, more often than not, she was obliged
to call home. The resulting book, first published in 1982, was
hailed as an extraordinary achievement: harrowing, humanizing,
moving, and bitingly funny. Now, some two decades later, "Is There
No Place on Earth for Me? "continues to set the standard for
accounts of mental illness.
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