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Chargement... Too Bright to Hear Too Loud to Seepar Juliann Garey
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Inscrivez-vous à LibraryThing pour découvrir si vous aimerez ce livre Actuellement, il n'y a pas de discussions au sujet de ce livre. This book depicts one man’s journey through untreated bipolar disorder. The narrator, Greyson Todd, is in a mental institution receiving electroconvulsive therapy. He tells his story in non-linear flashbacks from his childhood to what he can recall of his recent past. The first three quarters of this book are incredibly gut-wrenching, as the reader watches Greyson self-destruct and suffer psychotic breaks. The last section, Aftershocks, is the most powerful and provides a small glimmer of hope. I am not sure why the author decided to make the protagonist a privileged Hollywood executive with unlimited funds. It seemed a device to allow him to travel the world to exotic places in order to depict licentiousness in excruciating detail. Be prepared for a surfeit of sex, drugs, alcohol, self-harm, and bodily functions. I have a friend whose husband had this disorder, and this story seems realistic, at least from hearing secondhand about that experience. Her husband is no longer with us. This book is not pleasant reading, but it makes a significant point. I hope it conveys the importance of staying on prescribed medication to treat this life-threatening condition. Too Bright to Hear Too Loud to See by Juliann Garey chronicles the tortured life of Greyson Todd. Greyson suffers from bi-polar disorder, a fact he's tried to keep concealed and resisted for years. In the opening he is successful Hollywood studio executive who leaves his wife and daughter. He subsequently spends a decade traveling around the world, his mental health slowly disassembling as his illness progresses unchecked until he ends up in a New York psychiatric hospital. During the time he is receiving twelve thirty second electroshock treatments, three intertwined timelines in Grayson's life are expertly presented in short chapters. The three timelines include: Greyson as a child/young man dealing with his own father's struggles with mental health; Greyson as a married man and father grappling with his own depression; and the decade of Grayson traveling, when his unrestrained bipolar disorder races toward a manic state. As Grayson recounts: "That was fun. While it lasted. But it didn’t. It never does. And now, it—all of it—is too much. Too hot. Too bright to hear. Too loud to see. And with no way to turn it down, there is no sleep, nothing to stop the onslaught. (Location 1960-1963)" For a debut novel, Too Bright to Hear Too Loud to See is certainly a spectacular achievement for author Juliann Garey. It is a real page turner. While reading you know where Grayson is heading, but have no idea of all the agony and turmoil he goes through before he gets to the psych unit. At times it can be a gritty novel. Not only is Grayson full of acrimony, sarcasm, and rage at times, he is also drawn in a self destructive state to lurid places and risky behavior. At the same time, on some level, Grayson knows where he is heading and he is terrified of his fate; juxtaposed to this is Grayson's occasionally witty, acute, and insightful recognition of his actions and situation. Combining skillful writing and great pacing, Garey made Grayson into a real, compelling character. Even if you are disgusted by his actions, you have sympathy for him because you know he needs help. You know he knows he needs help, on some level, even while he makes a self-destructive run away from getting help or admitting he needs help. Too Bright to Hear Too Loud to See is certainly a masterful accomplishment. Very Highly Recommended - not an easy read but a stunning debut novel http://shetreadssoftly.blogspot.com/ Disclosure: My Kindle edition was courtesy of Random House's Soho Press and Netgalley for review purposes.
Which is one of the things that makes bipolar disorder such a hard thing to look at. Which is why this book is so great. Juliann Garey gets right up inside the disease and, with the sheer force of her talent, she makes us want to look. And she makes us laugh. And she helps us understand and feel compassion. Prix et récompensesDistinctionsListes notables
Fiction.
Literature.
HTML: An NPR Great Read: This novel about bipolar disorder and one man's journey through the world is a "convincing portrait of mental illness" (Entertainment Weekly). Aucune description trouvée dans une bibliothèque |
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Google Books — Chargement... GenresClassification décimale de Melvil (CDD)813.6Literature English (North America) American fiction 21st CenturyClassification de la Bibliothèque du CongrèsÉvaluationMoyenne:
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It's an exceptional look at what's going on in the head of someone who is mentally ill, whose brain is so wildly misinterpreting reality, unfortunately with extremely negative consequences. ( )