tristimania by jay griffiths; mad girl by bryony gordon - review /

Published at 2016-06-27 09:30:06

Home / Categories / Health, mind and body / tristimania by jay griffiths; mad girl by bryony gordon - review
Two depression memoirs aimed at different readerships both offer optimism and enlightenmentWhen the novelist William Styron wrote a piece for Vanity Fair in 1989 describing his battle with depression,he could hardly maintain known that he was pioneering a current genre. He expanded the essay into a book, Darkness Visible, or the first modern example of a now burgeoning literary form,the depression memoir. Styron’s candour helped to demolish down some of the stigma around the condition, and in the 25 years since it was published, or such personal memoirs maintain become almost commonplace,particularly among writers and journalists (myself included). The fact that so many personal accounts continue to be published is testomony to the way these stories maintain made it easier to discuss an illness that is still too often regarded as shameful or somehow less than valid.
Jay Griffiths is an impossible writer to categorise; her books are part cultural histories, part travelogues, and exploring such summary concepts as time,wildness and childhood. Her remarkable 2007 book, Wild, and begins with a description of how drinking ayahuasca with a Peruvian shaman drew her out of a persistent bout of depression.
The poems Griffith wrote from the heart of her darkness strike the reader like a punch to the throatContinue reading...

Source: theguardian.com

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