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Night Falls Fast by Kay Redfield Jamison
- Vintage Books
- 0-375-70147-8
- 448 pages
- $14.00 (Can. $21.00)
"This powerful book will change people's lives-- and, doubtless,
save a few." --Newsday More about the Book
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About this guide
The questions, discussion topics, and author biography that follow are designed
to enhance your group's reading of Kay Redfield Jamison's Night Falls
Fast. We hope they will expand your thinking and aid in your discussion of
this important book. Kay Redfield Jamison is one of the world's leading
authorities on the subject of mood disorders and suicide. As she revealed in her
bestselling memoir, An Unquiet Mind, she has suffered for much of her life
with manic depression, and at the age of 28 survived a serious suicide attempt.
In Night Falls Fast, she presents and interprets the most influential
scientific studies on the causes, methods, and effects of suicide, juxtaposing
them with the intimate writings of the mentally ill and the experiences of their
loved ones to create a comprehensive and enlightening view of a crisis of
epidemic proportions--a crisis that is increasingly taking its toll upon the
young. With an essayist's grace and a clinician's insight, Jamison has produced
an illuminating and necessary book on one of public health's most urgent
challenges.
For discussion
- Jamison writes, "My hope was to maintain an individual perspective--through
an emphasis on the psychology of suicide and an extensive use of the words and
experiences of those who seriously attempted to, or eventually did, kill
themselves" [p. 20]. In other words, she attempts to write about her subject with
an intimacy and immediacy that will engage the reader, despite the painful nature
of her topic. How well does she succeed in what she sets out to do? How does this
book change your thinking about those who kill themselves?
- Jamison reports that the rate of suicide has tripled among young people in
the past forty years, and that suicide is now the second leading cause of death
among American college students. What are some of the forces in our society,
according to studies Jamison cites, that might be causing this alarming trend?
What point is Jamison making about the variety of styles and feelings expressed
in suicide notes? Only one in four people who kill themselves, she says, is
likely to leave a note. What in the state of a suicidal mind would account for
this unwillingness to communicate their intentions?
- In his suicide note, British painter Benjamin Haydon left a quote from
Shakespeare's King Lear: "Stretch me no longer on this rough world" [p. 83]. If
this is a feeling shared by most people who commit suicide, doesn't it seem
entirely understandable, and forgivable, that they should end their lives? Why
then have most societies been so insistent that suicide be considered a crime and
a grave sin, involving forfeiture of property, exclusion from hallowed
graveyards, etc.?
- What is the cumulative effect upon you, as a reader, of the use of statistics
throughout the book? Are you surprised, for instance, that while 30,000 Americans
die from suicide each year, 500,000 make suicide attempts? How does Jamison
bridge the gap between scientific studies and the emotion surrounding the issue
of suicide?
- Jamison tells with care and great empathy the tragic stories of Dawn Befano,
Drew Sopirak, and Meriwether Lewis, among others. Do these stories successfully
provide a window into the tumultuous and shattered minds of those who suffer from
mood disorders? What makes them so compelling? Do you believe that these deaths
were avoidable?
- Jamison uses the story of the unknown woman who climbed into the lions'
enclosure at the Washington Zoo to point out the urgent problems of the homeless
mentally ill. She writes, "They make us uncomfortable, but not so uncomfortable
that we protect or house, insure or tend or heal them" [p. 158]. Do you agree
with Jamison that American society is irresponsible and cruel in its policies
regarding the homeless mentally ill?
- Jamison uses the examples of the Japanese volcano Mount Mihara, San
Francisco's Golden Gate Bridge, and other popular sites for those who choose to
end their lives, to illustrate the odd fact that suicide sometimes has a dramatic
allure that can be contagious. Why do you suppose this is so? Do you think that
young people are especially vulnerable to a "copycat" phenomenon in suicide?
- How do you feel about the poem on pages 90-91, written by a fifteen-year-old
boy who killed himself two years later? Does it seem predictive of his fate? Do
you think this was a masked cry for help?
- The story of Washington political figure John Wilson shows that the social
stigma surrounding mental illness is still strong enough to put an end to
political hopes. Is this bias justified? Should the public demand that those who
hold public office be free of mental instability? Or is this a lingering
prejudice that will eventually be outgrown?
- Surgeon General David Sacher has said, "As a society, we do not like to talk
about suicide" [p. 264]. Why, in a society which is so permissive and so open,
should suicide, depression and related forms of mental illness be hard to talk
about? To what degree does a sense of shame prevent the suicidal individual from
seeking help? Do you agree with Jamison when she argues that educating the public
about mental illness will bring about a change in thinking, treatment, and public
policy regarding suicide?
- Until the publication of An Unquiet Mind, Jamison had kept her own
illness a secret. Had it been known, do you think she could have had a successful
career as a professor of psychiatry, or that she would have been chosen to write
an important standard textbook on the subject of manic depression? Would you
consider the sacrifice of Jamison's own privacy ultimately worth the exposure,
considering that she wants to save lives? Do you think that her books will have a
definite effect in reducing the suffering of the mentally ill and the toll of
suicide in this country?
- Jamison points out that the field of psychiatry is turning ever more strongly
towards pharmacological management and away from psychotherapy, and that "there
remains a pervasive belief in many psychiatric and research quarters that
medication by itself is sufficient to deal with serious mental illness" [p. 252].
What is the danger of trying to manage mood disorders solely through medication?
What does Jamison suggest is the ideal approach to the treatment of these
illnesses?
- What do you think of psychiatrist Thomas Szasz's views on mental illness and
suicide [pp. 253-54]? Was the court correct in making him pay damages to the wife
of a patient of his who killed himself after Szasz instructed him to stop taking
lithium? Should someone who holds such views be made to stop practicing medicine?
- Jamison quotes the writer Joseph Conrad, who suffered from major depression
and survived a suicide attempt, as saying: "Suicide, I suspect, is very often the
outcome of mere mental weariness--not an act of savage energy but the final
symptom of complete collapse" [p. 198]. Yet, as she points out, most people are
able to survive the stresses of life without "complete collapse," and others are
not. Why is this so? How important a role does the biochemistry of the brain play
in our response to life's troubles?
- Josephine Pesaresi's description [pp. 301Ð302] of the response to her
husband's suicide underscores the lack of real empathy that people often have for
the survivors of people who kill themselves. Do you think that her family's sense
of isolation was unusual? Do the immediate survivors of a person who kills
himself or herself need a different kind of concern and care from the people
around them than, say, the survivors of a death by cancer?
- What does Jamison mean when she writes, in her epilogue: "I am by temperament
an optimist, and I thought from the beginning that there was much to be written
about suicide that was strangely heartening" [p. 309]?
- Reflecting on the emotional toll it took to write this book, Jamison writes
ruefully, "Mostly, I have been impressed by how little value our society puts on
saving the lives of those who are in such despair as to want to end them. It is a
societal illusion that suicide is rare. It is not" [p. 310]. The staggering fact
is that "every seventeen minutes in America, someone commits suicide" [p. 309].
Does this book leave you with a new sense of what an urgent and tragic public
health issue suicide is? Do you come away with some ideas about what can be done
to save the lives of potential suicides?
Suggestions for further reading A. Alvarez, The Savage God; Gina
Berriault, Afterwards; Marc Etkind, Or Not to Be: A Collection of Suicide Notes;
Susanna Kaysen, Girl, Interrupted; Jon Krakauer, Into the Wild; Howard Kushner,
American Suicide; Martha Manning, Undercurrents; Sylvia Plath, The Bell Jar; Roy
Porter, Mind-Forg'd Manacles; Edwin Shneidman, M.D.,et al., Voices of Death;
William Styron, Darkness Visible and Lie Down in Darkness.
Also available from Vintage Books:
An Unquiet Mind
- 0-679-76330-9
- $12.00 (Can. $16.95)
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