Asylum (Seabrook book) explained

Asylum
Author:William Seabrook
Language:English
Genre:Memoir
Publisher:Harcourt Brace
Pub Date:1935

Asylum, also known as Asylum (An Alcoholic Takes the Cure), is a memoir by American travel writer William Seabrook, first published in 1935 by Harcourt Brace. The book documents Seabrook's experiences in Bloomingdale Asylum in New York, where he was committed from 1933 to 1934 or 1935 for his alcoholism.[1] [2] [3]

Asylum is mentioned, though not by name, in The Crack-Up, a 1945 posthumous collection of essays by F. Scott Fitzgerald.[4] Asylum was republished in 1947 by Bantam Books, and again in 2015 by Dover Publications.

Critical reception

In 2015, Ryan Holiday of the Observer called Asylum "not just quite possibly one of the first modern addiction/recovery memoirs, but perhaps the most honest and haunting accounts of the struggle for mental health in literature."

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The Best Book About Addiction You've Never Heard of Is Back in Print After 50 Years. Holiday. Ryan. December 7, 2015. Observer.com. June 15, 2023.
  2. Web site: Cannibals, Zombies, and Hexes on Hitler: The Life and Times of William Seabrook. Welton. Benjamin. March 7, 2015. Vice. June 15, 2023.
  3. Book: Murray, Heather. 2022. Asylum Ways of Seeing: Psychiatric Patients, American Thought and Culture. University of Pennsylvania Press. 24–25. 978-0812253573.
  4. Book: Fitzgerald, F. Scott. F. Scott Fitzgerald. West III. James L. W.. 2005. Explanatory Notes. Fitzgerald: My Lost City: Personal Essays, 1920–1940 (The Cambridge Edition of the Works of F. Scott Fitzgerald). https://books.google.com/books?id=Tm-aQYp-EfsC&pg=PA273. Cambridge University Press. 273. 978-0521402392.