Night Falls Fast: Understanding Suicide by Kay Redfield Jamison, Kay Redfield Jamison

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(Paperback - 1 VINTAGE)

  • Pub. Date: January 1999
  • 448pp
  • Sales Rank: 32,041
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: January 1999
    • Publisher: Random House Inc
    • Format: Paperback, 448pp
    • Sales Rank: 32,041

    Synopsis

    From the best-selling author of An Unquiet Mind: the first major book in a quarter century on suicide, with a particular focus on its terrible pull on the young. Night Falls Fast is both compelling and timely: in the United States and across the world there has been a frightening surge in suicides committed by children, adolescents and young adults. It is the third major cause of death in 19- to 24-year-olds, and the second in college students. Dr. Kay Redfield Jamison, an internationally recognized authority on depressive illnesses and their treatment, knows this subject firsthand. At the age of 28, after years of struggling with manic-depression, she attempted to kill herself. Her survival marked the beginning of a life's work to investigate both mental illness and self-inflicted death.

    Weaving together a psychological and scientific exploration of the subject with personal essays about individual suicides, Dr. Jamison in this book brings not only her compassion and literary skill, but all of her knowledge, research and clinical experience to bear on this devastating problem. In tracing the network of reasons that underlie suicide, Dr. Jamison gives us astonishing examples of the methods and places people have chosen to kill themselves, and a startling look at their journals, drawings and farewell notes. She also brings us vivid insight into the most recent findings from hospitals and laboratories across the world; the critical biological and psychological factors that interact to cause suicide; the new strategies being evolved to combat them; and the powerful, but insufficiently used treatments from modern medicine.

    Night Falls Fast dispels the silence and shame that too often surround suicide; it helps us to understand the suicidal mind, to better recognize the person at risk, and to comprehend the profound and disturbing loss created in those left behind.

    About the Author:

    Kay Redfield Jamison is Professor of Psychiatry at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. She is the author of the national best seller An Unquiet Mind: A Memoir of Moods and Madness and co-author of the standard medical textbook on manic-depressive illness. She is also the author of Touched with Fire: Manic-Depressive Illness and the Artistic Temperament, as well as more than a hundred scientific papers about mood disorders, psychotherapy, psychopharmacology, and suicide. Dr. Jamison, formerly the director of the UCLA Affective Disorders Clinic, is the recipient of numerous national and international scientific awards, including the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention's Research Award. She is, as well, Honorary Professor of English at the University of St. Andrews in Scotland. Dr. Jamison lives in Washington DC, with her husband, Dr. Richard Wyatt, a physician and scientist at the National Institutes of Health.

    NY Times Book Review - Andrew Solomon

    At once the most relentless and the most sympathetic book Jamison has produced, written with an edifying urgency that surpasses her previous volumes. Jamison persuasively uses numbers to demonstrate that suicide is a vast public health crisis...

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    Biography

    Kay Redfield Jamison is Professor of Psychiatry at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine.  She lives in Washington, D.C.

    Customer Reviews

    Night Falls Fast: Understanding Suicideby Anonymous

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    August 09, 2008: I have battled with major depression and suicidal thoughts for over 20 years. I have had 4 loved ones that completed suicide. This book is, for lack of a better word, 'fascinating' both as a victim of depression and as a survivor of other's suicides. It is like peeking behind the curtain of hell. I found as both a victim of depression and a 'survivor' that the insight in this book was comforting. The eternal 'why' in the wake of a suicide comes as close as I have ever found to being answered. One of the most frustrating parts of the disease of depression is not being able to articulate the amount of darkness and pain in a 'real' way. This book can help friends and family members understand what you battle and why. I bought this book not to find a reason to die. I had come up with plenty of those, but to understand more fully what causes those dark thoughts. People fear talking to someone who is depressed and suicidal about suicide. They feel the mere mention of the word will cause the act but the thoughts are already there and just being able to talk to someone about those thoughts can release the pressure on the trigger. We often feel isolated because fear of being misunderstood, judged, or having our feelings invalidated, keeps us from reaching out. It is this isolation that more often than not is fatal. For those of us dealing with depression, our job is not to find a way to die, our job is to be there with our unique understanding of the pain to help others. We have been where others can not go. The one blessing of depression is we truly know what another is feeling. We do not fear the expression of dark thoughts. We fear the silence.

    Night Falls Fast: Understanding Suicideby Anonymous

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    June 29, 2005: As someone who struggles with 'the Night' daily, this book offered a solid base of well researched highly compassionate information. I agree with other reviewers that dangerously suicidal individuals should wait until feeling healthier before attempting this read. Personally I feel like I am 'one up' on suicide after finishing Dr. Jamison's book. As I fight to keep from destroying myself from within, my logical mind can return to what I have learned in this profound volume in order to combat some of the irrationalities. Thank You, Dr. Jamison.


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