In Canada
last week, there was an event known as Bell Let’s Talk; the purpose of this
mental health initiative is to encourage people to talk about mental health (a
subject people are reluctant to discuss though 1 in 5 Canadians will experience
some form of mental illness) and to raise funds for mental health
organizations. In the United Kingdom,
there is a Beat Blue Monday campaign, an effort to raise a smile among the
British public and funds for mental health charities. These events had me checking Schatje’s
Shelves to find novels that deal with the topic of mental health. Here are 20 titles I found:
After Birth by Elisa Albert
The author never
explicitly names postpartum depression in this novel about a woman in the first
year of motherhood, but Ari’s resentment over her experience of childbirth,
alienation from the rest of the world, and complicated feelings about her son
ring true to the condition.
The Hours by Michael Cunningham
This novel
which won the Pulitzer Prize was inspired by Virginia Woolf’s Mrs. Dalloway. The story reveals a single day in the lives
of three women from three different time periods, including Virginia Woolf
herself.
The Round House by Louise Erdrich
The Round
House tells the story of 13-year-old Joe who is forced to grow up too soon
after his mother is brutally attacked.
The author gives insight into the daily manifestation of PTSD, and
offers the perspective of what it’s like to care about someone struggling with
it.
Hausfrau by Jill Alexander Essbaum
The heroine
is a woman in a seemingly happy life but she is plagued by a nearly
debilitating depression which nothing seems to ease.
The Marriage Plot by Jeffrey Eugenides
Leonard,
one of the main characters in this novel, lives with manic depression which
affects his work, his friendships, and his romantic relationships.
Tender is the Night by F. Scott Fitzgerald
Fitzgerald wrote
this novel while his wife Zelda was in the hospital being treated for
schizophrenia. Set on the French Riviera in the 1920s, the book is the story of
psychoanalyst Dick Diver and his wife Nicole who also happens to be his
patient.
The Yellow Wall-Paper by Charlotte Perkins Gilman
First
published in 1892 and based on the author’s experiences with depression, the
book is written as the secret journal of a woman who, failing to relish the
joys of marriage and motherhood, is sentenced to a country rest cure. In the
involuntary confinement of her bedroom, the hero creates a reality of her own
beyond the hypnotic pattern of the faded yellow wallpaper.
I Never Promised You a
Rose Garden by
Hannah Green
Deborah
Blau, diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia, spends three years in a
psychiatric hospital. Her story echoes the author’s experiences, and the doctor
in the story was supposedly based on her real-life doctor, the German
psychiatrist Frieda Fromm-Reichmann.
Ordinary People by Judith Guest
Conrad
tries to commit suicide after the tragic death of his older brother, so his
parents send him to a psychiatric hospital. After his release, with help from
his psychiatrist, Conrad examines his depression and attempts to understand his
relationship with his mother.
Nobody is Ever Missing by Catherine Lacey
The novel follows
the impulsive Elyria on a one-way flight to New Zealand, where she’s gone to
try to forget about the life — her husband, her late sister, a spiraling
depression — behind her. Her thoughts are ruminative and obsessive, and
increasingly violent, and reveal the inner workings of depression and anxiety.
I Know This Much is
True by Wally
Lamb
Dominick
Birdsey, the narrator, is a 40-year-old housepainter, horrifically abused and
emotionally unavailable, who has an identical twin who is a paranoid
schizophrenic who believes in public self-mutilation.
She’s Come Undone by Wally Lamb
Delores
Price slowly unravels after dealing with a traumatic event as a young teenager.
As a twentysomething woman, she spends years in an institution after a suicide
attempt. She eventually quits therapy and attempts to rebuild her life on her
own terms.
A Gesture Life by Chang-rae Lee
Lee’s novel
is a story of secrets and trauma that can’t be forgotten. When Franklin Hata is
injured in a fire, he’s reminded of his painful past and the tortured woman he
fell in love with during the war.
Norwegian Wood by Haruki Murakami
The driving
force of Murakami’s devastating novel is the depression which plagues Naoko,
Toru, and the young man whose suicide brings them together. It’s an honest and
lyrical look at the overwhelming feeling of powerlessness and helplessness that
depression often brings.
A Tale for the Time
Being by Ruth
Ozeki
Ozeki tackles
depression from two angles: through the
protagonist, 16-year-old Nao, who falls into a suicidal depression after moving
back to Tokyo, and through Nao’s father, who falls into a deeper depression
after losing his job.
The Bell Jar by Sylvia Plath
Originally
published under a pseudonym, this is the semi-autobiographical account of
Plath’s own clinical depression. In
stream-of-consciousness, she describes the emotional and psychological
breakdown of Esther Greenwood, a woman struggling against self-destructive
thoughts and overwhelming darkness.
The Silver Linings
Playbook by
Matthew Quick
This novel tells
the story of Pat, a young teacher who's just left a psychiatric hospital. The book
portrays what it's like to live with depression, anxiety, and mood swings.
All My Puny Sorrows by Miriam Toews
What would
you do if your sister asked you to help her commit suicide? That's the question
around which the novel is framed. Elfreida, a successful concert pianist, asks
her younger sister Yolandi, to help her commit suicide.
Mrs. Dalloway by Virginia Woolf
The novel
focuses on A day in the life of Clarissa Dalloway, a high society English
woman. Through the character of Septimus, a shell-shocked veteran of World War I,
the book criticizes the treatment of the mentally ill. Apparently, Woolf used her own struggles with
bipolar disorder to inform Septimus’s character.
Lowboy by John Wray
William
Heller, a 16-year-old living with schizophrenia, escapes from a psychiatric
hospital and ventures out into the underground labyrinth of the New York City
subway system -- a metaphor for his own mind -- while his overprotective mother
hires a policeman to find him.
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