Imagining Robert: My Brother, Madness, and Survival A Memoir

$20.00 CAD

pp. iv, 305, signed by the author on the title page, “Imagining Robert is an account of Robert Neugeboren’s 30-year history of mental illness. In this moving memoir, his brother Jay describes the tragedy of psychosis and illustrates the redemptive power of writing. The author imagines his brother as two people–one hospitalized, the other communicative and lucid–and crafts a story of his brother’s thoughts by weaving together Robert’s exquisitely written letters about this unfolding family tragedy. The instability of the author’s own children and his manipulative mother’s affliction with Alzheimer’s disease multiply the pressure he feels, threatening his own mental health. His careful words seem an attempt to organize the confusion around him. The imagined friendship with the brother he lovingly cares for serves as an important source of self-examination. Neugeboren’s prose restores his brother’s dignity by refusing to let the details of how Robert has suffered in psychiatric institutions go unrecorded. “

In stock

SKU: 87295 Category:

Book Information

ISBN 688149685
Published Date 1997
Book Condition Very Good
Jacket Condition Very Good
Binding Hb
Size 8vo
Place of Publication Scranton, Pennsylvania, U.S.A.
Edition First Edition
Inscription Signed
Category:
Author:
Publisher:

Description

pp. iv, 305, signed by the author on the title page, “Imagining Robert is an account of Robert Neugeboren’s 30-year history of mental illness. In this moving memoir, his brother Jay describes the tragedy of psychosis and illustrates the redemptive power of writing. The author imagines his brother as two people–one hospitalized, the other communicative and lucid–and crafts a story of his brother’s thoughts by weaving together Robert’s exquisitely written letters about this unfolding family tragedy. The instability of the author’s own children and his manipulative mother’s affliction with Alzheimer’s disease multiply the pressure he feels, threatening his own mental health. His careful words seem an attempt to organize the confusion around him. The imagined friendship with the brother he lovingly cares for serves as an important source of self-examination. Neugeboren’s prose restores his brother’s dignity by refusing to let the details of how Robert has suffered in psychiatric institutions go unrecorded. “

Additional information

Weight 0.85 kg