Hurry Down Sunshine by Michael Greenberg
Michael Greenberg's spare, unflinching memoir
begins with a bang: "On July 5, 1996, my daughter was struck mad." Hurry Down
Sunshine chronicles the summer when 15-year-old Sally experienced her first
full-blown manic episode--an event that in a "single stroke" changed her
identity and, by extension, that of her entire family. Simply told and
beautifully written, Greenberg's memoir shines a stark light on mental illness,
painting a vivid picture of a brain and body under siege by a mania that seems a
separate living thing squatting within the patient. As a writer who lives "so
much in his head," Greenberg is particularly anguished by his daughter's
fractured psyche, and his honesty about being both sickened and fascinated by
his daughter's condition is breathtaking: "During the worst moments, I think of
her as my disease--the disease I must bear.... I am intoxicated with
Sally's madness in both senses of the word: inebriated and poisoned." So
desperate is he to understand her that he relentlessly researches mental illness
(the book is peppered with fascinating insights into drug therapy and anecdotes
about writers who struggled with madness), and even goes so far as to sample a
full dose of his daughter's medication. Startling, heart-wrenching, and yet
unwaveringly unsentimental, Hurry Down Sunshine is an unforgettable story
of a young girl's descent into madness, told through the eyes of a harried and
helpless father trying desperately to bring her back...Read More |