Books for Prep









Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - Journey into Depression
This is a very slim volume, just 84 pages long, which started life as a lecture given at a symposium sponsored by the Department of Psychiatry at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. It was later developed into a piece for Vanity Fair before being published as a book.

Styron was hit by serious depression at the age of 60, and describes most evocatively his own struggle with the life-threatening illness from first symptoms, through his treatment, his brush with suicide, hospitalisation to eventual cure. Along the way he includes the stories of friends and others so afflicted - many of them also writers.

It's the honesty of the book that makes it so compelling. It was one of the first "insider" accounts of depression, and captures extremely well just what it feels like. (You have to have been there to know.) I agree with him that the word "depression" is totally inadequate, sounding more like a mild case of the blues rather than something that fills your soul with dread and despair. (



Rating: 2 out of 5 stars - Disappointing
It would be lovely to believe that depression can be cured as it was for him. That all it takes is hanging in there long enough, and eventually it will go away. I can appreciate that this author feels that having gone thru what he did, that he knows what he is talking about, but sadly he doesn't. I don't know if his depression was a result of alcoholism. The way he writes, I don't think so, I think that the alcoholism was a result of the depression. I also don't think you are ever "cured" from depression -- it will always linger in the back of your mind, waiting.....



Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - Taking A Scalpel To Depression
I'll admit it - the first few times I tried reading Darkness Visible was a disaster. That long, overdrawn anecdote about his trip to Paris was as dry as and enjoyable as sucking on cardboard. Then, I made (or skipped) it to chapter two. Bingo. From there Styron starts talking about Camus, Hoffman and Levi, all of whom had an impact on his life. From there, I started getting some perspective.

Styron can write, that's a fact. And the guy employs more interesting adjectives than Microsoft does workers. But that is a plus and a minus. Sometimes the writing takes too long to hit a point. Other times, his verbiage is dead on and leaves you breathless. To his credit, he is aware as anyone that heavy depression lies beyond words. It's an experience and not one anybody should have to endure. As well, I don't think I've ever seen a better investigation of a man looking at his every emotion under a microscope. Reading up on medication, consuming the DSM-IV like a doctor; he understood his depression more than most psychiatrists can dream to.

After I completed the book, I read it again and it got better. His description of depression will illuminate the sensory feeling of it for the depressed. If you have suffered from depression, I guarantee, you will find yourself here. For the layman, for those who don't know this cruel disease, it will offer, as best words can, a blow by blow account of how it feels day by day, hour by hour.

I do recommend this book. Not as a study but a first hand account. If you want statistics and such, there are plenty of books out there to mull over. Depression, by its nature, can be profoundly confusing and nearly impossible to put into any cognitive thought or words. This is how it feels beneath the dreary emptiness, the inability to smile or make toast. This is the blueprint. If you've endured depression or are, this may offer you some insight to your condition. If you've escaped the black cloud of melancholia but you want to know, this is a good place to start.




Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - Darkness Visible
This insightful book views suicide from the side of one who has suffered from a desire for self destruction. For the survivors of a suicide it is difficult to answer so many questions following the event, this book begins to answer questions of the thought process leading up to suicide.

Another excellant book to consider reading on the subject is "No Time to Say Goodbye, Surviving the Suicide of a Loved One" by Carla Fine. It draws from the experiences of many who have been through it and offers counsel.



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - Thanks is not enough
I can't thank William Styron enough for this book. Suffering from depression myself, I had days in which I was counting breaths just to make it through the day. This book got me through another day in the darkest of places.





page 2 of  29
 1  2  3  4  5  6  7  8  9  10  11 
 






In association with Amazon.com