Strangers to Ourselves: Unsettled Minds and the Stories That Make Us

Strangers to Ourselves: Unsettled Minds and the Stories That Make Us

by Rachel Aviv

Narrated by Andi Arndt

Unabridged — 7 hours, 41 minutes

Strangers to Ourselves: Unsettled Minds and the Stories That Make Us

Strangers to Ourselves: Unsettled Minds and the Stories That Make Us

by Rachel Aviv

Narrated by Andi Arndt

Unabridged — 7 hours, 41 minutes

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Overview

Notes From Your Bookseller

How does our society decide who is or isn't mentally unwell, and how does that impact how we take care of one another? This is a work of extraordinary empathy and wisdom.

A New York Times Book Review Ten Best Books of 2022
A Wall Street Journal Ten Best Books of 2022

The acclaimed, award-winning New Yorker writer Rachel Aviv offers a groundbreaking exploration of mental illness and the mind, and illuminates the startling connections between diagnosis and identity.

In Strangers to Ourselves, a powerful and gripping debut, Rachel Aviv raises fundamental questions about how we understand ourselves in periods of crisis and distress. Drawing on deep, original reporting as well as unpublished journals and memoirs, Aviv writes about people who have come up against the limits of psychiatric explanations for who they are. She follows an Indian woman, celebrated as a saint, who lives in healing temples in Kerala; an incarcerated mother vying for her children's forgiveness after recovering from psychosis; a man who devotes his life to seeking revenge upon his psychoanalysts; and an affluent young woman who, after a decade of defining herself through her diagnosis, decides to go off her meds because she doesn't know who she is without them. Animated by a profound sense of empathy, Aviv's exploration is refracted through her own account of living in a hospital ward at the age of six and meeting a fellow patient with whom her life runs parallel-until it no longer does.

Aviv asks how the stories we tell about mental disorders shape their course in our lives. Challenging the way we understand and talk about illness, her account is a testament to the porousness and resilience of the mind.


Editorial Reviews

Publishers Weekly

07/04/2022

New Yorker staff writer Aviv debuts with a collection of thought-provoking journalistic profiles of people with mental illness. From a depressed self-aggrandizing physician to a mother who murders one of her twins during a mental health episode to a Harvard-educated debutante with bipolar disorder, Aviv details how six individuals have navigated the boundaries of scientific understandings of mental illness and developed self-understanding through psychiatric treatment. The author includes her own story: She was diagnosed with anorexia at age six and committed to a hospital, where she encountered the power of diagnoses to shape one’s self-conception: “There are stories that save us, and stories that trap us, and in the midst of an illness it can be very hard to know which is which.” Aviv uses interviews, subjects’ journals, and the writings of such figures as Sigmund Freud and psychiatrist Roland Kuhn to study how illness affects how one sees oneself. For example, the journals of Aviv’s subject Bapu, an Indian woman with schizophrenia, pay little heed to her diagnosis and treat her connection with the Hindu god Krishna as real. Aviv’s considerable storytelling abilities are on full display here as she renders compassionate and nuanced portraits of individuals wrestling to gain a coherent sense of identity from the limited lexicon of psychiatry. This eye-opening examination makes for a valuable addition to modern discourse around mental illness. (Sept.)

From the Publisher

"Intimate and revelatory . . . attuned to subtlety and complexity . . . This isn't an anti-psychiatry book— Aviv is too aware of the specifics of any situation to succumb to anything so sweeping and polemical . . . a book-length demonstration of Aviv’s extraordinary ability to hold space for the 'uncertainty, mysteries and doubts' of others."
Jennifer Szalai, New York Times

“A groundbreaking exploration of mental illness and the mind” ―New Yorker (Best Books of 2022)

"In writing against the limits of psychiatric narratives, into the space where language has failed, Ms. Aviv paradoxically finds language for the most ineffable registers of human experience. She begins to name correctly what has been named wrongly. For a journalist, as for a psychiatrist, there is no higher achievement."
Elizabeth Winkler, The Wall Street Journal

"One of the pleasures of this book is its resistance to a clear and comforting verdict, its desire to dwell in unknowing. At every step, Aviv is nuanced and perceptive, probing cultural differences and alert to ambiguity, always filling in the fine-grain details. Extracting a remarkable amount of information from archival material as well as living interview subjects, she brings all of these people to life, even the two whom she never met."
Jordan Kisner, The Atlantic

"Every attempt at resolution comes with its own pitfalls, which Aviv considers with empathy and analytic perspicacity . . . She is especially sharp in the granular—by focusing on the unique composition of each of these individuals’ perceptions, she can show how they change shape as soon as they come into contact with perceptions crafted in the forge of social history."
Callie Hitchcock, Los Angeles Review of Books

"The strength of Strangers to Ourselves is in its engrossing case studies, which contribute vivid anecdotes to this ongoing conversation about the complex and perplexing nature of the mind . . . as typically excellent as Aviv's magazine journalism, viscerally rendered and thoughtful portraits that slide into meditations on the mind."
Kate Knibbs, Wired

"This deeply empathetic book raises probing questions about our psychiatric system and the very nature of self-identity."
Kristen Martin, NPR (Best Books of 2022)

"Written with an astonishing amount of attention and care . . . Aviv’s triumphs in relating these journeys are many: her unerring narrative instinct, the breadth of context brought to each story, her meticulous reporting. Chief among these is her empathy, which never gives way to pity or sentimentality."
Charlotte Shane, Bookforum

"Vivid, wrenching, and ambitiously researched. . . Strangers to Ourselves showcases [Aviv's] mastery of psychological portraiture."
Sally Satel, The Washington Post

"Aviv knows there is no clear answer or single reason. And this, to me, is what makes her writing so vital: her predilection for uncertainty and ambiguity. Both medicine and journalism would benefit from more doubt instead of more authority—because the best way to tell a story, to change minds, is to begin with a question instead of an answer."
Kevin Lozano, The Nation

"A beautifully written, profoundly researched narrative . . . Each time I try to describe it to someone, I stumble over words until I finally land on 'You just have to read it.'"
Mia Armstrong-Lopez, Slate

"Sublte and penetrating . . . Aviv is an instictive storyteller . . . Her own language is meticulous, empathetic, tirelessly inquisitive . . . Despite—or perhaps because of—her rigour, she also dares to acknowledge facets of identity that elude any theories of the mind currently available to us and to engage with profound mystery . . . [Aviv approaches] mental illness with such humility and kinship and her complex, illuminating book is all the stronger for it."
Hephzibah Anderson, The Guardian

"Profoundly intelligent . . . Superbly written portraits of five people who sit at the crossroads of alternative explanations for their pain."
David Shariatmadari, The Guardian

"Tremendous . . . [Strangers to Ourselves] casts hard insights into the mutability of therapy."
Chicago Tribune

"Strangers to Ourselves is a subtle, deft, and fascinating look at mental illness in America . . . I am impressed by Aviv’s deft manipulation of studies, academic treatises, doctor’s notes, and interviews, but I am moved by her commitment to weaving uncertainty, mystery, and devotion into these narratives as well."
Hannah Gold, Gawker

"[A]n important contribution to contemporary thought about mental illness and the psychiatrization of everyday life."
Lynne Tillman, Bookforum

"Aviv champions . . . a novel kind of mindfulness: a recognition of which frameworks we use to understand mental illness, and a search for frameworks that best serve who we want to become . . . Aviv makes a powerful case for locating storylines that uplift and transform."
Elizabeth Svoboda, Undark

"The potential meanings of psychiatric diagnosis refract out and away from one another like light from a prism–a benchmark to guide treatment, a numeric code on a health insurance document, a pretense to enact violence on the vulnerable–but for Aviv, they are stories, first and foremost, sizzling with equal potential to heal or to harm."
Astra Magazine

"Combining the cool poise of Janet Malcolm and the confessional bravery of Joan Didion, journalist and New Yorker staff writer Rachel Aviv challenges the way we think about mental illness . . . The result is a fascinating and empathetic look at the mysterious ways our minds can fail us."
Taylor Antrim, Vogue

"A work of fierce moral intelligence. In withholding judgment and letting her subjects speak for themselves, Aviv grants them the dignity that society has often denied."
Rhoda Feng, Vulture

"To read Aviv, a staff writer at the New Yorker, is to always wonder whether any other writer could have pulled off her dexterity and perceptive ability to navigate impossibly complex subjects—only to arrive at the conclusion that probably not . . . thought-provoking and profound."
Mother Jones (Best Books of 2022)

"A series of haunting, finely drawn case studies involving psychiatric diagnosis, medication, and hospitalization . . . In its careful movement from the granular to the generic and generalized, Strangers to Ourselves extrapolates on the broader consequences of these disputes, not least as they influence and mostly worsen the suffering of the patients in question."
Christopher Lane, Psychology Today

"Known for bringing empathy and an uncanny depth of perception to her reporting on those who exist in the margins, Aviv shines a light on stories of abuse, neglect, mental disorders, and social injustice. She helps readers understand the complex humanity of people who may otherwise be dismissed, seeing past labels and preconceptions so we can connect on a deeper level."
Shondaland

"A sharp, compassionate and necessary investigation, not to be missed."
Bookpage

"[Aviv's] searing Strangers to Ourselves is a revelation of literary journalism and medical research . . . There are radical lessons to learn here, Aviv suggests, if we only open our eyes."
Oprah Daily

"This eye-opening examination makes for a valuable addition to modern discourse around mental illness."
Publishers Weekly

"In examining the way we tell stories about disorders of the mind, Aviv questions the very core of what is normal and what is reality. An incredibly researched, empathetic, and moving book."
Emily Firetog, Lit Hub

"Perceptive and intelligent . . . Aviv applies her signature conscientiousness and probing intellect to every section of this eye-opening book. Her profiles are memorable and empathetic . . . Aviv treats her subjects with both scholarly interest and genuine compassion . . . A moving, meticulously researched, elegantly constructed work of nonfiction."
Kirkus Reviews (starred review)

"Strangers to Ourselves is relentlessly faithful to complexity, absolutely unsettling in all the best and most important ways. If, as James Baldwin writes, “the purpose of art is to lay bare the questions hidden by the answers,” then Aviv’s reportage becomes literature; not just because of the nimble pivots in her prose, the way her syntax unseats our expectations as deftly as her stories do, but because of her restless integrity. Louise Gluck describes anorexia as an attempt “to construct a plausible self,’ and Aviv explores her subjects not as diagnoses but as fully dimensional characters—full of yearning, self-questioning, heartache, savvy, and hope—trying to construct plausible selves through and despite their experiences of what we call mental illness, inside social landscapes shaped by injustice and inequality. Aviv is attentive to the nuances and tendrils of their interior lives—the moments where their experiences refuse to conform neatly to the narratives they’ve been described by. What other writers treat as easy conclusions, Aviv treats as doorways—stepping through them into a more rugged wilderness of truth on the other side."
Leslie Jamison, author of Make it Scream, Make it Burn

"In this penetrating, landmark book, Rachel Aviv investigates what she calls the 'psychic hinterlands,' drawing on her customary vivid reporting and her own extraordinary personal story to pose unsettling questions about the ways in which we reckon with mental illness by categorizing it, diagnosing it, giving it a name. Threading together the intimate and emotionally shattering stories of a series of very different people who have struggled to live with and to understand their own psychological afflictions, Aviv has created an arresting work of profound empathy and insight."
Patrick Radden Keefe, author of Say Nothing and Empire of Pain

“Master prose stylist Rachel Aviv quietly explodes our neat narratives as she rescues the radiant meanings of lives formed in extremity, including her own. Breaking away from labels that have the power to create the futures they foretell, her case histories are kaleidoscopic, filled with sudden radiance and uncomfortable discontinuities that in the end, force forward profound questions about what is real. Brilliant.”
George Makari, MD, author of Of Fear and Strangers: A History of Xenophobia, director of the DeWitt Wallace Institute of Psychiatry, Weill Cornell Medical College

“A groundbreaking, paradigm-shifting exploration of the relationship between diagnosis and identity. This is the kind of book that can make your life flash before your eyes, glittering with new insights and a sense of unguessed possibilities.”
Elif Batuman, author of Either/Or and The Idiot

"Writing with uncanny empathy and integrity, Rachel Aviv illuminates the ways that culture shapes our perceptions of mental illness and who is deserving of care. Strangers to Ourselves is a work of landmark reporting that is truly heartbreaking and astonishing.”
Cathy Park Hong, author of Minor Feelings: An Asian American Reckoning

“Aviv writes with an unpredictable mixture of intimacy and distance, exploring how psychiatric language often alters what it names. She has assembled a remarkable archive of unpublished materials—memoirs, poems, journals (including her own)—that offers a visceral counterpoint to the official languages of institutions and expertise. I admire her rigor and eloquence but also her restraint—she makes vivid experiences we can’t explain.”
Ben Lerner, author of The Topeka School

"A heartfelt plea for a return to detailed storytelling as an element in mental health care and, within the stories, attention to context: the factors like culture, class, race, religion, family customs, idiosyncratic experience, and private dreams and ambitions that shape lives and illnesses."

Peter Kramer, author of Listening to Prozac

Library Journal

08/01/2022

New Yorker staff writer Aviv explores the effects of medication and therapy on treatment of mental illness. She argues that psychiatry's current emphasis on biochemical explanations of mental illness may be detrimental to some patients. Rather, she advocates for a therapeutic approach that seeks to understand the patients' experiences and understandings of their own illness, which aligns with an older psychiatric practice. In this way, patients may understand their illness as something which they can recover from, rather than an incurable condition that needs to be constantly managed. The author describes four case studies in which patients developed mental health issues and sought treatment with medication. Using the patients' own experiences, she describes the nature of their mental illness and explores how medication helped or hindered their treatment. Additionally, she explores external factors such as cultural differences in perceptions of mental health, racial disparities in health-care treatment, economic conditions, and gaps in medical literature regarding long-term use of medication. Finally, Aviv also relates her own experiences with anorexia as a child and her recovery process. VERDICT An interesting look into treatment of mental illness.—Rebekah Kati

Kirkus Reviews

★ 2022-05-25
A perceptive and intelligent work about mental illness from the New Yorker staff writer.

In her debut, Aviv illuminates the shortcomings of modern psychiatry through four profiles of people whose states of being are ill-defined by current medical practice—particularly by those diagnoses laid out in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders. Throughout, the author interweaves these vivid profiles with her own experiences. When she was 6, in the wake of her parents’ divorce, Aviv was diagnosed with anorexia despite her abiding sense that that label was inaccurate. Later, the author writes about taking Lexapro. “To some degree, Lexapro had been a social drug, a collective experience,” she writes. “After a sense of uncanny flourishing for several months, my friends and I began wondering if we should quit.” Aviv applies her signature conscientiousness and probing intellect to every section of this eye-opening book. Her profiles are memorable and empathetic: a once-successful American physician who sued the psychiatric hospital where he was treated; Bapu, an Indian woman whose intense devotion to a mystical branch of Hinduism was classified against her will as mental illness; Naomi, a young Black mother whose sense of personal and political oppression cannot be disentangled from her psychosis; and Laura, a privileged Harvard graduate and model patient whose diagnosis shifted over the years from bipolar disorder to borderline personality disorder. Aviv treats her subjects with both scholarly interest and genuine compassion, particularly in the case of Naomi, who was incarcerated for killing one of her twin sons. In the epilogue, the author revisits her childhood hospitalization for anorexia and chronicles the friendship she cultivated with a girl named Hava. They shared some biographical similarities, and the author recalls how she wanted to be just like Hava. However, for Aviv, her childhood disorder was merely a blip; for Hava, her illness became a lifelong “career.”

A moving, meticulously researched, elegantly constructed work of nonfiction.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940178753057
Publisher: Macmillan Audio
Publication date: 09/13/2022
Edition description: Unabridged
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