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Mohrbooks Literary Agency
Sebastian Ritscher
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English
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NO ONE CARES ABOUT CRAZY PEOPLE

Ron Powers

The Chaos and Heartbreak of Mental Health in America

Here, New York Times-bestselling author Ron Powers offers a searching, richly researched narrative of the social history of mental illness paired with the deeply personal story of his two sons' battles with schizophrenia.
From centuries-old stories of torture of "lunatiks" at Bedlam Asylum to the infamous eugenics era to the follies of the anti-psychiatry movement to the current landscape in which too many families struggle alone to manage afflicted love ones, Powers limns our fears and myths about mental illness and the fractured public policies that have resulted.

Braided with that history is the moving story of Powers's beloved son Kevin—spirited, endearing, and gifted—who triumphed even while suffering from schizophrenia until finally he did not, and the story of his courageous surviving son Dean, who is also schizophrenic.

A blend of history, biography, memoir, and current affairs ending with a consideration of where we might go from here, this is a thought-provoking look at a dreaded illness that has long been misunderstood.

Ron Powersis a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and New York Times bestselling author. He is the co-author of Flags of our Fathers and True Compass—both #1New York Times Hardcover Nonfiction bestsellers. His biography of Mark Twain—Mark Twain: A Life—was also a New York Times bestseller.
Available products
Book

Published 2017-03-21 by Hachette Book Group - New York (USA)

Book

Published 2017-03-21 by Hachette Book Group - New York (USA)

Comments

Extraordinary and courageous…I’m not sure I’ve ever read anything that handles the decline of one’s children with such openness and searing, stumbling honesty…[Powers] writes with fierce hope and fierce purpose to persuade the world to pay attention.No doubt if everyone were to read this book, the world would change.

A sustained howl of incandescent outrage [No One Cares About Crazy Peopleis] too heartbreaking to be comforting (despite its glimmers of die-hard optimism) and too uncompromising to be ignored. It's a book to stand comparison with Sylvia Nasar's A Beautiful Mind but that is in many ways even more powerful. . . .

Korea: Prunsoop

One of the most engrossing accounts of raising a family I’ve ever read, one in which Mr. Powers makes universal his themes of parental love, bewilderment and rage at the vagaries of biological fate.