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The Family Silver: A Memoir of Depression and Inheritance

AUTHOR: Sharon O'Brien
ISBN: 0226616649

SHORT DESCRIPTION: Struggling with depression, Sharon O'Brien goes beyond the biochemical explanations and emotional narratives that commonly explain its origins and takes the reader into the heart of her family's past, exposing the pressures and possibilities of...

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         Editorial Review

The Family Silver: A Memoir of Depression and Inheritance
- Book Review,
by Sharon O'Brien

Chicago Tribune
"An extraordinary combination of social and personal history....[O'Brien] is...a wise and compassionate narrator of her own rocky past."

Library Journal, July 15, 2004
"With startling honesty and compassion, O'Brien unveils family stories of desire and despair."

Los Angeles Times, July 30, 2004
"A rewarding and thought-provoking take."

Book Description
Finding herself struggling with depression ("like a rude houseguest, coming and going of its own accord"), Sharon O'Brien set out to understand its origins beyond the biochemical explanations and emotional narratives prevailing in contemporary American culture. Her quest for her inheritance took her straight into the pressures and possibilities of American culture, and then to the heart of her family--the generations who shaped and were shaped by one another and their moment in history. In The Family Silver, as O'Brien travels into her family's past, she goes beyond depression to discover courage, poetry, and grace.

A compassionate and engaging writer, O'Brien uses the biographer's methods to understand her family history, weaving the scattered pieces of the past--her mother's memo books, her father's reading journal, family photographs, tombstones, dance cards, hospital records, the family silver--into a compelling narrative. In the lives of her Irish-American relatives she finds that the American values of upward mobility, progress, and the pressure to achieve sparked both desire and depression, following her family through generations, across the sea, from the Irish famine of the 1840s to Harvard Yard in the late 1960s.

"Many people who write stories of depression or other chronic illnesses tell tales of recovery in the upward-mobility sense, the 'once I was ill, but now I am well' formula that we may find appealing, but doesn't match the messiness of our lives," she writes. "Mine is not such a tale. But it is a recovery tale in another sense--a story of salvage, of rescuing stories from silence." Told with humor and honesty, O'Brien's story will captivate all readers who want to know how they, and their families, have been shaped by the past.



From the Inside Flap
Finding herself struggling with depression ("like a rude houseguest, coming and going of its own accord"), Sharon O'Brien set out to understand its origins beyond the biochemical explanations and emotional narratives prevailing in contemporary American culture. Her quest for her inheritance took her straight into the pressures and possibilities of American culture, and then to the heart of her family--the generations who shaped and were shaped by one another and their moment in history. In The Family Silver, as O'Brien travels into her family's past, she goes beyond depression to discover courage, poetry, and grace.

A compassionate and engaging writer, O'Brien uses the biographer's methods to understand her family history, weaving the scattered pieces of the past--her mother's memo books, her father's reading journal, family photographs, tombstones, dance cards, hospital records, the family silver--into a compelling narrative. In the lives of her Irish-American relatives she finds that the American values of upward mobility, progress, and the pressure to achieve sparked both desire and depression, following her family through generations, across the sea, from the Irish famine of the 1840s to Harvard Yard in the late 1960s.

"Many people who write stories of depression or other chronic illnesses tell tales of recovery in the upward-mobility sense, the 'once I was ill, but now I am well' formula that we may find appealing, but doesn't match the messiness of our lives," she writes. "Mine is not such a tale. But it is a recovery tale in another sense--a story of salvage, of rescuing stories from silence." Told with humor and honesty, O'Brien's story will captivate all readers who want to know how they, and their families, have been shaped by the past.



About the Author
Sharon O'Brien is the John Hope Caldwell Professor of American Cultures and professor of American Studies at Dickinson College. The author of the acclaimed biography Willa Cather: The Emerging Voice, she is also the editor of the three-volume Library of America edition of Cather's work.




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         Book Review

The Family Silver: A Memoir of Depression and Inheritance
- Book Reviews,
by Sharon O'Brien

The Family Silver: A Memoir of Depression and Inheritance

FROM THE PUBLISHER

"Finding herself struggling with depression (which, "like a rude houseguest," would come and go of its own accord), Sharon O'Brien set out to understand the origins of depression within her family, not willing to rely on the biochemical explanations and psychological accounts that prevail in contemporary American culture. Her quest took her straight into the pressures and possibilities of the American dream as it was experienced in the heart of her family - the generations who shaped and were shaped by one another and their moment in history. In The Family Silver, O'Brien travels deep into her family's past, going beyond the legacy of depression to discover courage, poetry, and grace." O'Brien uses the biographer's methods to understand her own family's history, weaving the scattered pieces of the past - her mother's diaries and memo books, her father's reading journal, family photographs, tombstones, dance cards, hospital records, the family silver - into a story of remembrance and redemption. In the lives of her Irish American relatives, she finds that the American values of upward mobility, progress, and the pressure to achieve created both desire and depression that followed her family through generations, across the sea from the Irish famine of the 1840s to Harvard Yard in the late 1960s.

FROM THE CRITICS

Library Journal

The psychological memoir usually embraces the views of mental illness shared by the dominant culture. Particularly in the realm of mood disorders, contemporary writers like William Styron (Darkness Visible) and Kay Redfield Jamison (An Unquiet Mind) have integrated their tales of personal suffering with the newest biochemical discoveries to form what may be a uniquely American subgenre: the recovery story. Such is the view of O'Brien (American studies & English, Dickinson Coll.), who searches for the roots of her own treatment-resistant depression in both her immigrant Irish American ancestors and, ultimately, American culture itself. With startling honesty and compassion, O'Brien unveils family stories of desire and despair that hark back to the Irish famine of the 1840s, drawing parallels between our society's obsession with upward mobility and the quick fix and her own downward emotional spiral as she grapples with a chronic emotional illness. Although readers accustomed to pop psychology tell-alls may be put off by O'Brien's somewhat academic tone, this highly original and ambitious work is recommended for academic libraries and public libraries with strong psychology collections.-Stephanie Ortyl, Enoch Pratt Free Lib., Baltimore Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.


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