RECENT READING: SCHIZOPHRENIA
Hidden Valley Road: Inside the Mind of an American Family by Robert Kolker
I have always been interested in what makes people tick. In college, that motivated me to take both the introductory psychology course and also an advanced course in abnormal psych. This was the late 1960’s when so-called “refrigerator mothers” were responsible for causing autism in their offspring. And in other research, a controlling mother supposedly was a primary factor in developing schizophrenia, nurture rather than nature (DNA) as the cause.
Hidden Valley Road is a riveting account of the Galvin family and their twelve children. Of the ten boys and two girls, six of the males were at some point diagnosed as schizophrenic. One may have had bipolar disorder and been misdiagnosed. They ultimately became the first family to be studied by the NIH.
Don and Mimi Galvin were products of their time, postwar years, and it was important for Don to be successful in his career and for Mimi to be the perfect mother with, to the outside world, a normal, happy, well-adjusted family. In fact, the reality was quite different. Don was often absent on business and the boys, beginning with Donald, the eldest, became mentally ill, delusional, violent, unpredictable in the extreme, and both physically and sexually abusive toward some of their siblings. The girls, Margaret and Mary, were the youngest and while spared illness, suffered some of the worst abuse and emotional abandonment.
Kolker’s account is based on intensive research and interviews with many family members. Interspersed between the chapters, which generally focus on one or two family members, is an ongoing history over more than fifty years of the scientific research into the causes of schizophrenia and the evolving trends in drug treatment and therapy. Even today, there is not a definitive answer. This quest for answers is almost as compelling as the saga of the children’s path to adulthood. That some of these siblings were ultimately able to lead “somewhat normal” lives is a testament to their resilience, despite being scarred. Highly recommended! (~JWFarrington)
SMALL SCREEN: A GARDEN & PARIS CRIME
This Beautiful Fantastic (Amazon Prime, You Tube)
This feature film is charming and whimsical with no violence or sex. Bella Brown, a rather strange young woman, rents a cottage and is charged with cleaning up the back garden, a task that far exceeds her abilities and her fears. She’s a budding writer who works part-time in a special library. Her crusty, gruff neighbor and his amiable dogs body take up the challenge of assisting her with the garden and all ends well. This is a simple treat of a movie.
Balthazar (Acorn)
Balthazar is a recent French crime series about a forensic doctor. Balthazar is a quirky coroner who talks to corpses and has animated conversations with his dead wife. He is sexy and brilliant, loves to cook and eat, and is often seen snacking. Chief inspector Helene Bach finds him exasperating, but she and her assistant, Delgado, must work with him and do recognize his talents.
These are complicated murder cases and always involve an autopsy, graphically portrayed, which causes me to look away from the screen. Once the autopsy is over, I’m back involved. As I have only watched two episodes, it’s an open question if the gore will turn me off completely or if I stay with the series. The repartee between Balthazar and Helene, married mother of two, is well done and one of the delights of the program. So, the jury’s out.
Note: Header photo of a great blue heron ©JWFarrington (some rights reserved).
Hi Jean, I found this site while cleaning out. I love books and remember how literate you and Greg are. I have been rereading old favorites.
The Towers of Trebizond (Rose Macauly) and All Passion Spent ( Vita Sackville-West). Do you know them? From your old Pa Realtor. Chris Taylor. Hope you are both well.
Chris Taylor