John T. Slania

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Most journalists strive to write the “definitive piece,” an article so thoroughly researched and reported that it becomes the standard for a particular subject. John McPhee has been writing definitive pieces most of his life, and he offers us a sampling in his new book, Silk Parachute.

After reading an essay by McPhee, you feel you have gained a deep understanding of the topic. Consider “Spin Right and Shoot Left,” an essay about lacrosse, in which McPhee covers not only the history of the game, but all its rules and strategies. When you’ve finished reading, you feel ready to pick up a lacrosse stick and run onto the field. The experience is similar with “Checkpoints,” about fact-checking at The New Yorker. The essay leaves you impressed with the editors’ attention to detail and gives you an insider’s look at magazine publishing.

Many of the essays in Silk Parachute have appeared previously in The New Yorker, where McPhee has been a staff writer since 1965. Over those 45 years, he has written hundreds of essays, many of which have been compiled in one of his 28 books. His body of work includes Annals of the Former World, his authoritative book on geology that won him the Pulitzer Prize in 1999.

Clearly, McPhee is a master of his trade, so it shouldn’t be surprising that he’s accustomed to writing the definitive piece. Yet Silk Parachute also offers a personal side of this accomplished author. In the book’s title essay, McPhee recounts his boyhood memories of his 99-year-old mother, while in “Season on the Chalk,” he relates travels with his family along the English Channel. “Nowheres” is an account of his life in Princeton, New Jersey, where he was born, and where he now resides.

Silk Parachute offers an eclectic sampling from an accomplished author who is as comfortable writing about the intricacies of impersonal topics as he is sharing the intimacies of his personal life.

John T. Slania is a journalism professor at Loyola University in Chicago.

Most journalists strive to write the “definitive piece,” an article so thoroughly researched and reported that it becomes the standard for a particular subject. John McPhee has been writing definitive pieces most of his life, and he offers us a sampling in his new book,…

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The gritty side of black urban life has been portrayed so often in literature that it has become its own genre: street lit. Authors such as Iceberg Slim and Sister Souljah have captured the black experience in groundbreaking novels, and hip-hop artists like Tupac Shakur and 50 Cent have explored the dark side of urban life in words and music. So the challenge for Jerald Walker was to find something new to write about in Street Shadows: A Memoir of Race, Rebellion, and Redemption. Walker succeeds for two reasons: There are some unique experiences in his life, and he is a strong writer.

The plot line for Street Shadows is familiar—an African-American youth overcomes the poverty, drugs, gangs and violence of the big city to become a success. Walker grew up in a Chicago ghetto, dropped out of high school, joined a gang, abused drugs and was a thief. But he beat the odds to become a college professor, a reliable husband and a responsible father. His redemption is his writing, which is clear, crisp and rhythmic. From an early age, he writes with honesty and passion, and he earns the attention of his community college professor, who helps Walker enroll in the University of Iowa. This leads to his acceptance into the distinguished Iowa Writers’ Workshop, where he attains notoriety for his poignant urban essays.

Street Shadows is a compilation of some of those previously published essays, interspersed with new material that helps weave together the defining moments in Walker’s life. He recounts growing up with parents who were both blind and members of a religious cult, and he relates his struggles to overcome drug abuse and his return to school as a young adult. He also describes his encounters with racism as a college student, and later as an English professor on the East Coast.

The material is compelling, although it does have a stitched-together quality, because Walker hops from past to present rather than telling his tale chronologically. But it was great writing that saved Jerald Walker’s life, and it is great writing that saves this book.

John T. Slania is a journalism professor at Loyola University in Chicago.

The gritty side of black urban life has been portrayed so often in literature that it has become its own genre: street lit. Authors such as Iceberg Slim and Sister Souljah have captured the black experience in groundbreaking novels, and hip-hop artists like Tupac Shakur…

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Save for our popular culture and our fast food, there is little that the United States exports anymore. But move over Miley, Madonna and McDonald’s: America’s newest export is madness. At least, that’s the thesis of Ethan Watters’ Crazy Like Us.

Watters argues that Americans are as overbearing and influential in their treatment of mental health as they are with their other major exports. “In teaching the rest of the world to think like us,” he writes, “we have been, for better and worse, homogenizing the way the world goes mad.” More specifically, American-born psychoses like depression, post-traumatic stress disorder and anorexia are being taught to people in foreign countries. And because American drug companies stand to make billions from treating these worldwide maladies, they are encouraging this behavior.

Watters argues that because of cultural, religious and other historical differences, a one-size-fits-all approach to mental health treatment doesn’t work: “Cross-cultural researchers and anthropologists . . . have shown that the experience of mental illness cannot be separated from culture.” He supports his position with detailed case studies in which Western doctors failed in their treatment of mental health disorders in foreign countries. And from his research, he makes some eyebrow-raising allegations, such as that in Hong Kong, teenagers began suffering from anorexia after Western experts started raising awareness of the disorder. He also posits that when Western crisis counselors swooped in to treat the PTSD they expected after a tsunami devastated a portion of Sri Lanka, in some cases they actually caused local communities more distress.

The major defect of Crazy Like Us is that it doesn’t spend enough time acknowledging that perhaps in some cases, the lessons Americans are teaching foreign nations about mental health treatment might actually be worthwhile. For instance, do Third World countries with no concept of mental disorders benefit in any way when Western doctors provide treatment? Still, the provocative thesis and the exhaustive research behind Watters’ examples makes Crazy Like Usworthy of consideration as we grapple to understand the impact of globalization—even if it is just a state of mind.

John T. Slania is a journalism professor at Loyola University in Chicago.

Save for our popular culture and our fast food, there is little that the United States exports anymore. But move over Miley, Madonna and McDonald’s: America’s newest export is madness. At least, that’s the thesis of Ethan Watters’ Crazy Like Us.

Watters argues that Americans are…

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In an early chapter of Eating the Dinosaur, author Chuck Klosterman ruminates on whether he has a favorite guitarist. “That’s more a question of virtuosity versus feel,” he writes. “Jeff Beck has a high level of both, I suppose, but sometimes that works to his disadvantage. Clapton and Page are both good, but I think we’ve taken the blues as far as they can go. The blues get in the way now.” It’s a classic Klosterman riff, not unlike a riff from one of his guitar heroes. And it’s these writing flourishes that make Eating the Dinosaur such a gutsy, irreverent, wonderful read.

Klosterman is a gifted essayist whose work is regularly on display in Esquire and The New York Times Magazine. Now he displays his wit and wisdom in a nonfiction collection that explores pop culture, sports and the meaning of life. Eating the Dinosaur ponders such wide-ranging topics as the similarities between the late alt-rocker Kurt Cobain and the late cult leader David Koresh and some of the things Unabomber Ted Kaczynski had right. There are lighter pieces about sitcom laugh tracks, Garth Brooks, time travel and the new look of Pepsi. In the wrong hands, this eclectic mix could prove disastrous. But Klosterman exhibits a deep knowledge and a deft touch on an expansive list of topics, and his insights are sometimes enlightening, sometimes educational and always entertaining.

John T. Slania is a journalism professor at Loyola University in Chicago.

In an early chapter of Eating the Dinosaur, author Chuck Klosterman ruminates on whether he has a favorite guitarist. “That’s more a question of virtuosity versus feel,” he writes. “Jeff Beck has a high level of both, I suppose, but sometimes that works to his…

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Google is little more than a decade old, but look at the impact it has already had on our lives. It processes more than 70 percent of all searches on the web and generates $20 billion in annual advertising revenue. It is the site of choice not only to search the Internet, but to correspond by Gmail, to get driving directions on Google Maps, to make a free phone call using Google Voice or even to watch a video on YouTube, which Google acquired in 2006. The search engine is so ubiquitous, in fact, that it has become a verb; people don’t conduct a search anymore, they “google.”

Author Ken Auletta tackles the phenomenal growth of Google in his new book, Googled: The End of the World as We Know It. The title is provocative, but misleading. This is no treatise on how Google has become Big Brother. Auletta’s book, rather, is a fairly straightforward biography of Google and its founders, Sergey Brin and Larry Page. He takes a chronological approach, recounting how the pair met at Stanford, how they began their venture in a spartan Silicon Valley office building and how they never lost sight of their vision to become the world’s largest media company. The year-by-year account of Google’s growth can be tedious at times, but Googled does provide some intimate details of a company notorious for its secrecy. That’s because Auletta had unprecedented access to GooglePlex, the Mountain View, California, headquarters where Google now employs 20,000 people. Thus, we have an opportunity to sit in on the free-wheeling Friday afternoon Q&A sessions between Brin, Page and their employees. We witness the tough hiring process, where applicants are told they have a better chance of being accepted to Harvard than getting a job at Google. And we get a taste of the hubris of Google, where its engineers believe that any challenge can be overcome with a mathematical algorithm.

If there is a shortcoming to Googled, it’s that it doesn’t take as critical a look at the company as suggested in its subtitle. But overall, Googled does deliver an insider’s look at a dynamic company that, for better or worse, has changed our lives.

John T. Slania is a journalism professor at Loyola University in Chicago.

Google is little more than a decade old, but look at the impact it has already had on our lives. It processes more than 70 percent of all searches on the web and generates $20 billion in annual advertising revenue. It is the site of…

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William Faulkner wrote: “The past is never dead. It’s not even past.”

That argument gained credence when James Ford Seale was arrested more than 40 years after he and fellow Ku Klux Klan members tortured and murdered two young black men in Mississippi. The ghosts of his victims, and others who lost their lives during the long struggle for civil rights, seem eerily present in the courtroom during Seale’s murder trial, as chronicled in The Past is Never Dead: The Trial of James Ford Seale and Mississippi’s Struggle for Redemption. Author Harry N. MacLean’s main objective is to cover the trial in which a now aging and feeble Seale is accused of the 1964 killings of Charles Moore and Henry Dee. But the book’s broader theme concerns an underlying racial tension MacLean detects in Mississippi, and how the state’s white residents are still trying to atone for sins their ancestors committed against blacks. Thus, the steamy courtroom air seems thick with the spirits of hate-crime victims Medgar Evers, Emmett Till and other lost souls of the South.

Even while MacLean is covering Seale’s trail, he spends time traveling across Mississippi. His goal is to understand and describe the complex culture of the state. MacLean’s approach is effective when he recounts Mississippi’s struggle to recover from the Civil War, the rise of The Klan and the racial clashes during the 1960s. Equally engaging is his account of how Mississippi attempts to exorcise its demons, as when one small town tries to erect a memorial to Emmett Till. But the narrative loses its way when MacLean takes side trips to Faulkner’s hometown of Oxford, and later visits with an old black blues musician who admits he’s never heard of James Ford Seale. Fortunately, these distractions are short, and the drama of the murder trial is enough to keep the reader interested and the story moving forward.

In sum, The Past is Never Dead works both as a true crime potboiler and as a broader allegory of the South’s search for redemption.

John T. Slania is a journalism professor at Loyola University in Chicago.

William Faulkner wrote: “The past is never dead. It’s not even past.”

That argument gained credence when James Ford Seale was arrested more than 40 years after he and fellow Ku Klux Klan members tortured and murdered two young black men in Mississippi. The ghosts of…

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The romanticized version of the Civil War has noble Southerners united in a battle to preserve states’ rights and a genteel way of life. The reality is that the South was anything but unified, and there were any number of Southern abolitionists opposed to slavery, the true underlying issue of the war. Consider the residents of Jones County in southern Mississippi, the subject of The State of Jones. They were hardscrabble farmers too poor to own slaves. They were recruited by the South to fight in some major battles, including the siege of Vicksburg. But they ultimately became disenchanted, determining that they weren’t fighting for freedom, but to preserve slavery for wealthy plantation owners. They ended up deserting and returning home to establish their own independent government called “The Free State of Jones.” This ragtag band opposed slavery, declared their allegiance to the Union and fought unending waves of Confederates who tried to quell the uprising.

The State of Jones, by best-selling author Sally Jenkins and Harvard historian John Stauffer, is a colorful account of this defiant group of Southerners, led by a strong, fearless farmer named Newton Knight. A survivor of several Confederate assassination attempts, Knight also killed many of his enemies who came down to Jones County to hunt him down. But The State of Jones isn’t just about violence and war. It is also a love story—albeit a salacious one. Knight fathered close to a dozen children with two women: his white wife, Serena, and a freed slave named Rachel. He then tried unsuccessfully to enroll his mixed-raced children in an all-white school.

The State of Jones is an entertaining, informative book about a courageous group of Southerners clearly ahead of their time. It offers a refreshing look at the issues surrounding the Civil War, and some delightful surprises for even the most knowledgeable history buff.

John T. Slania is a journalism professor at Loyola University in Chicago.

The romanticized version of the Civil War has noble Southerners united in a battle to preserve states’ rights and a genteel way of life. The reality is that the South was anything but unified, and there were any number of Southern abolitionists opposed to slavery,…

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Reza War + Peace: a Photographer's Journey is a look at the human impact of war through the eyes of the renowned photojournalist Reza Deghati, known by his first name. This book is a three – decade retrospective of his war photography for National Geographic, Time and Newsweek, in locations around the world. Reza captures the ravages of war in Iran, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Bosnia, Rwanda, Cambodia and other countries. The images sometimes are of the frontline soldiers in battle, but just as often, they are pictures of the citizens who are affected by the war. There are images of violence and death, but there are also photos of courage and strength, as ordinary people struggle to make a better life amid the surrounding tumult. As a result, Reza War + Peace presents a message of both sorrow and hope.

In stark contrast to this worldview is The Oxford Project, which focuses on the roughly 700 residents of Oxford, a peaceful, rural community in eastern Iowa. A young photographer named Peter Feldstein came to Oxford in 1984 after landing a teaching job at the nearby University of Iowa. He soon set out on an ambitious project: to photograph every resident in town. His studio portraits of the modest townsfolk were displayed in galleries and exhibitions, then filed away until 2005, when Feldstein decided to return to Oxford to photograph his subjects again.

The resulting images are a fascinating look at how people age and develop, a kind of real – life "before" and "after" experiment. What makes The Oxford Project more interesting is that Feldstein brings along writer Stephen G. Bloom to interview and write about the subjects to see how their lives have changed over the 21 years between the shots. This informal sociological study works largely because most of the residents of Oxford chose to stay there, making it an intriguing look at small – town America.

The best picture show

Give Encyclopedia Britannica and Getty Images credit for ambition in the publication of History of the World in Photographs: 1850 to the Present Day. This thick edition is a comprehensive look at the development of photography, from the grainy sepia portraits of the late 19th century to the colorful, high – resolution digital images of the early 21st century. The book presents a year – by – year exploration of the most important photos in history, including images of the Civil War, World War II, Tiananmen Square and 9/11. It also includes a DVD with 20,000 additional photos. This volume is a must for any serious photography buff.

This book is something to see

Visions of Paradise is a compilation of some of the best images found in National Geographic, chosen by its award – winning photographers. Each photographer was asked: "Where – or what – is heaven on Earth?" The answers were as varied as the parts of the world where the pictures were snapped. Chris Johns' image of paradise is four bushmen walking in the arid desert of Namibia. O. Louis Mazzatenta's picture is of a lone white wolf crossing the Arctic tundra. Robert Clark's definition of paradise is an early – morning shot of a worker checking the rails of the wooden roller coaster at King's Island in Ohio. These and hundreds of other photographs transport readers to some of the most beautiful places around the globe.

Reza War + Peace: a Photographer's Journey is a look at the human impact of war through the eyes of the renowned photojournalist Reza Deghati, known by his first name. This book is a three - decade retrospective of his war photography for National Geographic,…

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After exploring the dynamics of social change in The Tipping Point, and decision-making in Blink, Malcolm Gladwell turns to the subject of success in his new book, Outliers. Written in Gladwell's typical breezy, conversational style, Outliers seeks to discover what makes people smart, wealthy or famous. Gladwell argues that in studying successful people, we spend too much time on what they are like and not enough time on where they are from. In other words, he believes that it is "their culture, their family, their generation and the idiosyncratic experiences of their upbringings" which determines their success.

One of the joys of Gladwell's writing is the way he explains complex theories using everyday examples. In Outliers, he makes the case that success is sometimes shaped by the smallest factors. Take a person's birthday. The most successful Canadian hockey players are born in January, February and March, Gladwell writes, simply because the cut-off date for age class hockey in Canada is January 1. Thus, those born after that date are held back a year, giving them an age and size advantage.

Environment also plays a big role in success. Gladwell compares the lives of two geniuses: physicist Robert Oppenheimer and a little-known Missouri man named Christopher Langan. Both were tested and found to have high IQs. But Gladwell argues that Oppenheimer had a huge advantage being raised in a wealthy, educated family, while Langan was born into a poor, broken family. Oppenheimer went to Harvard and Cambridge and helped develop the nuclear bomb. Langan had poor grades in school, never finished college and makes money competing on TV game shows.

Then there is the factor of opportunity in shaping success. Why was Bill Gates successful? Well, he was smart, but he also grew up when the personal computer was coming of age, offering him opportunities to tinker and create new software. Gladwell's unique perspective challenges readers to think about intelligence, success and fame in a new way. Outliers is a clever, entertaining book that stimulates readers' minds and broadens their perspectives. It is, in its own way, genius.

After exploring the dynamics of social change in The Tipping Point, and decision-making in Blink, Malcolm Gladwell turns to the subject of success in his new book, Outliers. Written in Gladwell's typical breezy, conversational style, Outliers seeks to discover what makes people smart, wealthy or…

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What's Next: The Experts' Guide is the perfect title for Jane Buckingham's book forecasting the future because the reader never quite knows what topic will be tackled next. The "experts" interviewed here explore subjects as weighty as the environment, medicine and politics; and as fluffy as dating, reality television and plastic surgery.

This may be disappointing for readers looking for scholarly insight into the future, but for those who keep an open mind and don't take the topic too seriously, What's Next will be a fun read. After all, where else can you get analysis of the future of law from Harvard law professor Alan Dershowitz in the same book where the future of fashion is explored by designers Chip & Pepper? And since What's Next is a page-flipper—with essays on 50 different topics—readers can browse to find topics of interest. Some sample predictions: NFL star Shaun Alexander thinks professional sports will become more international and offer increasing opportunities for women. MIT robotics professor Rodney A. Brooks says robots will be increasingly used in our homes, at work and by our military. Drug researcher Mitch Earleywine believes illegal drug use will be halted by a combination of legalization, regulation and taxation. Space researcher (and PayPal co-founder) Elon Musk thinks tourists could be traveling to the moon in the next decade. Columnist Liz Smith says that with the growth of the Internet, there seems to be no limit to Americans' appetite for gossip.

Buckingham, president of a trend forecasting firm, admits that the list of topics is not comprehensive: She just wants it to be thought provoking. Even if the predictions prove wrong, Buckingham writes, "We're all responsible for becoming better educated about the way things are, so that we can join our experts in clearing a path for the way things could be." What's Next is a sometimes educational, sometimes entertaining book worthy of anyone curious about what the future might hold for things both great and small.

John T. Slania is a journalism professor at Loyola University in Chicago.

What's Next: The Experts' Guide is the perfect title for Jane Buckingham's book forecasting the future because the reader never quite knows what topic will be tackled next. The "experts" interviewed here explore subjects as weighty as the environment, medicine and politics; and as fluffy…

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What do an accused killer and an accomplished writer have in common? More than one would suspect, as revealed in the engaging page-turner True Story: Murder, Memoir, Mea Culpa. The story begins with New York Times Magazine contributor Michael Finkel being fired after he is caught making up a source. Finkel is in a funk until he receives a call informing him that someone has stolen his identity. That someone turns out to be a suspected murderer named Christian Longo. For weeks, Longo has been in Mexico telling people he is writer Michael Finkel. Now Longo is under arrest, charged with killing his wife and three young children.

Intrigued, Finkel strikes up a relationship with Longo, periodically visiting him in prison while he awaits trial. But most of their dialogue occurs through the exchange of letters. A friendship develops as Longo writes lengthy letters describing the slow destruction of his career, his marriage and his family. But he stops short of confessing to the murders. Finkel, meanwhile, explains in his letters how the pressures of fame drove him to fabricate information in the magazine story.

Finkel and Longo develop an unlikely bond because they share several things in common: both admit to having been liars in the past, both now pledge to stop telling lies and both believe their relationship will lead to their redemption. Finkel believes his career will be revived by writing a book about Longo's life, while Longo believes the book will set the record straight.

True Story is hard to put down. Finkel employs his journalistic skills to write a clear, concise, fast-paced narrative that unfolds in a series of short chapters. The tale reads like a gripping mystery: the reader doesn't know until the final pages just how truthful Longo is, or whether he can convince a jury of his innocence. Meanwhile, Finkel grapples with his own ethical issues, and whether he can convince the public that he will now always tell the true story.

 

John T. Slania is a journalism professor at Loyola University in Chicago.

What do an accused killer and an accomplished writer have in common? More than one would suspect, as revealed in the engaging page-turner True Story: Murder, Memoir, Mea Culpa. The story begins with New York Times Magazine contributor Michael Finkel being fired after he is…

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In the opening chapter of The Fear, author Peter Godwin writes with great excitement, “I am on my way home to Zimbabwe, to dance on Robert Mugabe’s political grave.”

Unfortunately for the people of Zimbabwe, things haven’t turned out as expected.

While political upheaval in 2011 is pushing to topple dictatorships in Egypt, Libya and Tunisia, Mugabe is still the president of Zimbabwe. He recently marked his 87th birthday,along with his 23rd anniversary as the ruler of the impoverished African nation. Mugabe lives in a palace and is chauffeured in a Rolls Royce. His fellow countrymen, meanwhile, have an average life expectancy of 37 years, suffer from starvation and are subjected to violence at the hands of his political regime.

When Godwin was beginning to write The Fear in 2008, Mugabe had just lost an election, and it was the hope of many in Zimbabwe that his reign of terror was through. But like many political strongmen, Mugabe refused to yield, and he subsequently cut a power-sharing deal to remain in power. Contrasted with the successful uprisings elsewhere in the world today, that anticlimactic result is disappointing to read about. Yet The Fear is as much Godwin’s personal story as it is a profile of Robert Mugabe, and he keeps the story consistently engaging.

Godwin spent his childhood in Zimbabwe, his family being among the few whites in the country. Returning in 2008, he visits the old homestead where he was raised, only to find it in ruins. He visits the grave of his sister, who died during Zimbabwe’s civil war. He calls his aging mother, in exile in London, to relate his experiences, and hears her tearful reactions on the phone. On a broader scale, Godwin witnesses the continued troubles of his homeland: death squads, torture camps, burning villages. The pain he feels is both individual and universal.

The hope is that by exposing the struggles of Zimbabwe in a book like The Fear, it will spark some meaningful changes, eliminate the stranglehold of dictatorship, wash away the terror and restore freedom. That way, maybe someday Peter Godwin can go home and celebrate with a victory dance.

In the opening chapter of The Fear, author Peter Godwin writes with great excitement, “I am on my way home to Zimbabwe, to dance on Robert Mugabe’s political grave.”

Unfortunately for the people of Zimbabwe, things haven’t turned out as expected.

While political upheaval in 2011 is…

Interview by
Artist, writer and musician Mira Bartok charts her talented mother’s battle with schizophrenia in her new memoir, The Memory Palace [read our review]. She spoke to BookPage about the challenge of dealing with a parent with a mental illness.

 

You write early in your book that children of schizophrenics are great secret-keepers. What inspired you to reveal your secret and write the book?
Truth be told, people did know about my mother—my close friends knew that I had a mentally ill mother—they just didn’t know much more than vague information about my distant past or how much I kept inside about it, and how much I obsessed about my mother’s wellbeing on a daily basis after she became homeless. I thought about her constantly—Was she hungry? Was she dead or alive? Was she sleeping on a park bench in the snow? Those were the big secrets, those little everyday sorrows I kept inside, hidden from friends and from family. I’m not a fan of most survivor memoirs, especially the blaming kinds, so I was always hesitant to even write about our relationship for fear of sounding like some kind of victim, which I didn’t feel I was. It was when I was in the middle of writing a novel with a minor character—a dead ringer for my mother and who, in the book, eventually took over the story and the other characters’ lives—that I thought: I better deal with this material or I’ll never be able to write fiction at all.
I also felt that, if I devoted a chunk of time to writing about her, I might come to some decision as to whether or not to see her again. Or at least come to some state of grace or peace about it all. What I never anticipated was finding out that she was dying and then being able to be at her side, with my sister, for the last few weeks of her life. Gratefully, I got the end of my story and the beginning of a new one.

 

You lived in fear of your mother to the point of changing your name and concealing where you lived. What was it like to lead a double life?
Well, I didn’t really feel like I was leading a double life as much as I felt like I was in hiding from one single person, a person I loved deeply but who could ruin my life if she found out where I was. At one point, from around late 1990 to 1992, when my mother and I were both living in Chicago at the same time I felt like I was always looking over my shoulder. And not really because I lived in fear of her—more that I lived in fear of having to take care of her for the rest of my life. Eventually, the stress of her living in the same town got too much and I moved to the east coast.

 

While trying to conceal your identity, you became an accomplished artist and author. How did this make hiding more difficult, and were there any close calls?
By the time I broke ties with my mother in 1990, I had already been exhibiting my art in the U.S. and abroad for over 10 years and had already finished my BFA and MFA in fine arts. When I came back from living in Italy in 1991, I began to focus on writing more and I also began my children’s book series for HarperCollins. I had had a one-person show in Italy when I lived there but was afraid to pursue any shows returned to Chicago because I knew my mother could show up at an opening. All of this didn’t make my hiding more difficult, but rather, it seriously compromised my art career. I was afraid to show again until 1994 and by then I had changed my name to Mira Bartók and the show was in another state. But while my name change negatively affected my art career, it actually helped me reinvent myself as a writer.
 

As far as close calls, yes, there were several. I would go to an exhibit (not my own but one at a museum or gallery), and then find out later in a letter from my mother (or from someone at the art venue) that she had also attended, sometimes on the same day! It was nerve-wracking to say the least, and very sad as well. On the one hand, I wanted her to know about my successes—she was my mother, after all. And yet, I knew the terrible price I would have to pay if she knew about what I had accomplished.

 

Though your mother’s mental illness made your childhood difficult, she also was clearly creative and a piano prodigy. Do you feel you inherited her creativity? Were there other positive things that your mother passed on to you despite her problems?

Yes, I definitely inherited her creativity, and my father’s as well. My mother was a brilliant musician who had a vast imagination and who also wrote lyrical (albeit delusional) prose in her journals. My father was a great writer and a fine painter. Fortunately I inherited their talents, not their psychological afflictions.
 

Despite her illness, when my mother was at her best, she was an extremely kind and loving person. If she never had been struck down by schizophrenia, she would have probably been an amazing mother as well as a brilliant pianist. She also cared deeply about human rights and was the kind of person who would take off her coat and give it to a stranger in need. She really instilled in me the importance of helping others less fortunate and to not focus on material wealth as a measure of success but on one’s capacity for love, creativity and kindness.

 

A car accident when you were 40 left you with memory loss. Did your struggles allow you to related more to your mother’s challenges?
To clarify a bit more, I never had total memory loss but rather very bad short-term memory loss and some impairment to my long-term memory. Long-term memory loss is actually quite rare with brain trauma but I think my problem with it was complicated by the fact that I had a history of PTSD. This is also the issue with many vets returning now from Iraq and Afganistan. Their PTSD complicates their recovery from TBI.
 

Fortunately, working on this book for about four years straight really helped my long-term memory recall. And my short-term memory isn’t great now but it certainly isn’t as bad as it was in those early days.

 
In regards to relating to my mother’s challenges, it wasn’t my problem with memory that allowed me to empathize so much with her but rather my difficulties with external stimulation. I had (and still have) a problem with filtering out sounds and other kinds of stimuli. I often feel bombarded by the world and from reading my mother’s letters, I now understand a tiny fraction of what she felt like on an ongoing basis. The problem with her though was not only did she feel overwhelmed by lights and sound and people but she couldn’t tell if they were real or not. That is a problem I fortunately never had to deal with, thank god!
 

Your mother’s obsession with keeping diaries and collecting photographs and obscure mementos—constructing a memory palace—helped you recapture some of your lost memories. While in some ways this obsession was disturbing, were you grateful she did this?

I actually saw her storage unit more as a cabinet of curiosities—she stored both the bizarre as well as the mundane, and often cataloged the items. While many of the things were items that I used as mnemonic devices for the memory palace I created in this book, there were just as many things in that room that were oddities she kept because she was so ill—like 1950s Geiger counters to measure radiation or dozens of scissors (why dozens?), or hundreds of articles on serial killers, aliens and the like. I was grateful for it all, even the disturbing things, for that is the stuff that art is made from if you are brave enough to face it—and it also gave me yet another glimpse into my mother’s tortured yet beautiful mind. My only regret is that I never photographed her cold little storage room. I just never thought about it until after my sister and I finally cleared it all out.
 

Having established a successful professional and personal life, were people surprised when they found out about your past? How did they react?

Like I said, many friends knew, just not to the extent of how rough it was growing up. And even so, I kept some of the worst things out of the book, just to avoid sounding sensationalist. I really wanted the focus to always come back to the two most important things: my mother’s and my loving yet complicated relationship and the enduring and redemptive power of art and the imagination. But back to your question, yes, some people who didn’t know me that well were really shocked because I am such an upbeat person and very balanced emotionally and they couldn’t imagine that I had had a childhood like that. One childhood friend said, after reading a review copy, “If I had known what life was really like for you, I would have begged my family to adopt you.” I actually feel like some people feel closer to me now, and visa versa. While my book obviously deals with some very dark things, most people who read it also find it uplifting and hopeful. A couple friends have begun to reach out to their local homeless shelters since they read my book and others have, for the first time, begun to either meditate or to attempt to rebuild their own broken relationships with a parent or sibling. It’s all been extremely positive. The best thing so far has been a handful of friends who called to say that they never understood what my life was like with a brain injury until they read the book. My sister said the same thing recently.

 

I hope my book has a positive effect on my readers and that it inspires them to either reach out to someone in need whom they might have ignored or that it empowers them to be more proactive and brave about their own difficult family situation. And I hope it helps family members who deal with various issues—not only mental illness but brain injury and other invisible disabilities such as Lupus, Lyme Disease, Fibromayalgia, and others.
 

You run a website that helps authors, artists, writers and composers find grants, fellowships and other opportunities. With the publication of The Memory Palace, do you see yourself offering advice and support to others raised by parents with mental illness?

Actually, I feel like I dealt with mental illness for so, so many years that for me, the best venue to help others will be doing public appearances with a speaker’s bureau, which I will start doing in 2011. As far as a blog, I am launching a blog on my Memory Palace website this winter. It will deal with subjects like memory loss, new research in neuroscience, issues concerning veterans with TBI, as well as quirky things that interest me, such as ancient memory systems, and art and literary projects that deal with memory and neuroscience.
 

Because of my TBI, I have so little energy and endurance that if I spend all my time giving advice and helping others I’ll have no time or brain juice to make art and frankly, that would kill me. I already devote hours and hours to helping artists with my other blog and I don’t want to let all those people down by spending a million hours doing another one. I’ll have to find a balance somehow between my two blogs, my creative projects and my speaking appearances. It’s called a luxury problem and I’m sure I’ll figure it out.

  

Artist, writer and musician Mira Bartok charts her talented mother’s battle with schizophrenia in her new memoir, The Memory Palace [read our review]. She spoke to BookPage about the challenge of dealing with a parent with a mental illness.


 
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