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Faces in the Water
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Faces in the Water by Janet Frame
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Incredible writing. I would like to read other works by this New Zealand author.
*** 1/2
A very bleak, semi-autobiographical portrait of "life" in mental asylums (as they used to be known) in the late 40s-50s in New Zealand at a time where people were treated just a notch better than animals and where lobotomies, electric shock treatments and insulin therapies were performed on a very dubious and arbitrary decision process. Things do improve a tad towards the end, when the medical profession starts to realise that better outcomes might be achieved if they were treating the patients as human beings. It was hard to read without wincing. Best to avoid if your own mental health is not that great.
A very bleak, semi-autobiographical portrait of "life" in mental asylums (as they used to be known) in the late 40s-50s in New Zealand at a time where people were treated just a notch better than animals and where lobotomies, electric shock treatments and insulin therapies were performed on a very dubious and arbitrary decision process. Things do improve a tad towards the end, when the medical profession starts to realise that better outcomes might be achieved if they were treating the patients as human beings. It was hard to read without wincing. Best to avoid if your own mental health is not that great.
Read: May 2017
This is a fictionalized memoir of Istina, a young woman living in various wards of two different psychiatric hospitals during the 1950s. It is thought to be semi-autobiographical since the author spent several years as a psych patient following a nervous breakdown. Istina lived in fear of the less than humane treatment and radical therapies, such as electric shock therapy, insulin shock therapy, and lobotomies. The reader never learns why she is there or why she receives the treatment that she does.
The writing is beautiful and poetic, despite the harsh and heartbreaking subject matter. It is scary to think how much of this story might actually be true. This book is definitely worthy of its place on the list.