<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><b>A fiercely honest and beautifully written book. --Paul Austin, author, <i>Beautiful Eyes</i> and <i>Something for the Pain</i></b> <b>A cautionary tale of careless psychiatric diagnosis, treatment, and resilience</b> Sawyer's memoir is a harrowing, heroic, and redeeming story of her battle with mental illness, and her triumph in overcoming it. In 1960, as a suicidal teenager, Sawyer was institutionalized, misdiagnosed, and suffered through 89 electroshock treatments before being transferred, labeled as unimproved. The damage done has haunted her life. Discharged in 1966, after finally receiving proper psychiatric care, Sawyer kept her past secret and moved on to graduate from Yale University, raise two children, and become a respected psychotherapist. That is, until 2001, when she reviewed her hospital records and began to remember a broken childhood and the even more broken mental health system of the 1950s and 1960s.<p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br>"A fiercely honest and beautifully written book." --Paul Austin, author, B<i>eautiful Eyes </i>and <i>Something for the Pain</i><br><br>"Annita Sawyer writes candidly -- and gracefully -- of her vulnerabilities and her persistence as she details her harrowing experience with a misdiagnosis, the hard-won life she forges in its wake, and her ultimate reconciliation with her buried past. <i>Smoking Cigarettes, Eating Glass </i>is a brave, compassionate, memorable book." --Jane Brox, author, <i>Five Thousand Days Like This One: The Evolution of Artifical Light</i><br><br>"Annita Sawyer's <i>Smoking Cigarettes, Eating Glass</i> is an extraordinary achievement, a memoir of a Yale-trained psychologist's harrowing struggle with serious mental illness and recovery. Beautifully written and full of heartbreak, hope and wisdom, for anyone with a personal or family history of mental illness, this is a must read." --Thomas H. Styron, Associate Professor of Psychiatry, Yale School of Medicine<br><br>"How to mend a psyche shattered by personal trauma? Annita Sawyer seeks answers to that question, first for her patients and then for herself. In prose without a hint of self-pity, yet rich in sensory details and professional insight, she draws a dark history into the light." --Scott Russell Sanders, author, <i>Divine Animal: A Novel</i><br><br>"The author's look back on her youth is especially absorbing from her perspective as a practicing psychologist who has treated people with mental illnesses similar to those she experienced." --<i>Library Journal</i><br><br>"This account of psychiatric misdiagnosis and mistreatment is remarkable for its narrative force, its palpable (and entirely justified) rage, and its fierce honesty." --Anne Fadiman, author, <i>At Large and At Small </i>and <i>The Spirit Catches You and You Fall Down</i><br><br>"This utterly gripping, sharply written memoir pulls no punches. With cauterizing honesty and a blessed sense of perspective, Annita Perez Sawyer takes you into and through her dark experience to the shores of wisdom." --Philip Lopate, author, <i>Being With Children</i><br><p/><br></br><p><b> About the Author </b></p></br></br><b>Annita Perez Sawyer</b> has had a psychology practice for more than 30 years, and she is a member of the clinical faculty at Yale University. Her essays have won prizes and been included among the "Notables" in the Best American Essays series. She lives in North Branford, Connecticut.
Cheapest price in the interval: 15.69 on November 8, 2021
Most expensive price in the interval: 15.69 on December 20, 2021
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