My Brother's Madness: A Memoir
Paul Pines.
Curbstone, $15.95 (316p) ISBN 978-1-931896-34-4
In this gracefully written
memoir, poet and novelist (and practicing psychotherapist) Pines
narrates his and his younger brother's lives through the matrix of his
brother's mental illness. A bright and sensitive child, Claude Pines
was damaged by his parents' divorce, an unstable mother and relentless
persecution at the hands of his father's monstrous second wife. The
story alternates between scenes from the Pines brothers' childhood and
Claude's descent into paranoid schizophrenia, an illness that began to
assert itself when Claude was a promising medical student and which
inexorably drove him into a marginal life. The author deftly handles
the complex structure, and the writing compels with rich characters,
black humor and clear evocations of locales ranging from an upper-class
Brooklyn neighborhood in the 1950s to the drug-blighted Alphabet City
of Manhattan's Lower East Side of the 1960s. Paul Pines resists making
easy diagnoses and illustrates the complicated relationship between
environmental and hereditary causes for a disease like Claude's. While
the narrative loses some of its intensity over its last third as Claude
slowly remakes himself as spokesperson for his fellow sufferers and
Paul settles into a solid middle-class life, it remains engaging
throughout. Never descending into easy sentimentality, Pines portrays
the family tragedy of mental illness and the bare possibility of
redemption we have in this life. (Oct.)