Book description
This reissue of Grace Paley's classic collectionâa finalist for the National Book Awardâdemonstrates her rich use of language as well as her extraordinary insight into and compassion for her characters, moving from the hilarious to the tragic and back again. Whether writing about the love (and conflict) between parents and children or between husband and wife, or about the struggles of aging single mothers or disheartened political organizers to make sense of the world, she brings the same unerring ear for the rhythm of life as it is actually lived. The Collected Stories is a 1994 National Book Award Finalist for Fiction.
Recommended on 1 episode:
When You Canât Trust the Stories Your Mind Is Telling
The National Institute of Mental Health estimates that nearly one in five adults in America lives with a mental illness. And we have plenty of evidence â from suicide rates to the percentage of Americans on psychopharmaceuticals â that our collective mental health is getting worse. But beyond mental health diagnoses lies a whole, complicated landscape of difficult, often painful, mental states that all of us experience at some point in our lives.
Rachel Aviv is a longtime staff writer at The New Yorker and the author of the new book âStrangers to Ourselves: Unsettled Minds and the Stories That Make Us.â Aviv has done some of the best reporting toward answering questions like: How do people cope with their changing â and sometimes truly disturbing â mental states? What can diagnosis capture, and what does it leave out? Why do treatments succeed or fail for different people? And how do all of us tell stories about ourselves â and our minds â that can either trap us in excruciating thought patterns or liberate us?
We discuss why children seeking asylum in Sweden suddenly dropped out mentally and physically from their lives, how mental states like depression and anxiety can be socially contagious, how mental illnesses differ from physical ailments like diabetes and high blood pressure, what Avivâs own experience with childhood anorexia taught her about psychology and diagnosis, how having too much âinsightâ into our mental states can sometimes hurt us, how social forces like racism and classism can activate psychological distress, the complicated decisions people make around taking medication or refusing it, how hallucinations can be confused with â or might even count as â a form of spiritual connection, what âdepressive realismâ says about the state of our society, how we can care for one another both within and beyond the medical establishment, and more.
This episode contains a brief mention of suicidal ideation. If you are having thoughts of suicide, text 988 to reach the Suicide & Crisis Lifeline. A list of additional resources is available at SpeakingOfSuicide.com/resources.
Books recommended:
-
đ
Madness and Modernism: Insanity in the light of modern art, literature, and thought (revised edition) (International Perspectives in Philosophy and Psychiatry)
by
Louis Sass
-
đ
Of Two Minds: An Anthropologist Looks at American Psychiatry
by
T.M. Luhrmann
-
đ
The Collected Stories (FSG Classics)
by
Grace Paley