The Mind Reels
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4.4 • 7 Ratings
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- $9.99
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- $9.99
Publisher Description
In his debut novel, longtime observer of culture and politics Fredrik deBoer depicts mental illness in all its grim and ugly reality, free of our culture's endless romanticization of insanity.
In a dorm room at her safety school, surrounded by corn-fed boys and contemptuous girls, Alice is losing her mind. Her first semester is spent clinging to middling grades between drunken hookups and roommate fights. The next brings sleepless nights, extreme weight loss, and effortless, compulsive energy, paused only by an unexpected summoning from the RA for evaluation. Thus begins an endless march of lithium, antidepressants, and Klonopin; doctors and therapists—when health insurance allows—along with overwhelmed parents and well-intentioned friends; all helpless bystanders as Alice descends deeper into chaos.
As chilling as a psychiatric case study, as wry and precise as Flaubert, The Mind Reels peels back society's polite trappings to portray the experience of mental illness in all its complexity.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
In this bracing debut novel from cultural critic deBoer (How Elites Ate the Social Justice Movement), a young woman becomes a prisoner of her own mind. Alice, born and raised in Oklahoma, is a student of "advanced mediocrity," floating to a B+ level in high school without dazzling anyone with her intelligence. Rejected by all her reach schools, she ends up at the University of Oklahoma. There, earlier signs of Alice's psychological distress—such as when she ran tweezers across her thighs "until they were raw and bleeding" during her summer job as a lifeguard—escalate. She experiments with drugs, discovers she can function on only four hours of sleep, and loses 20 pounds despite not being overweight. Concerns from her parents and friends prompt Alice to visit doctor after doctor and try various medications, from antidepressants to lithium, with increasingly unmanageable side effects like weight gain and memory fog. Over the next 16 years, Alice loses friends, family, and romantic relationships as she repeatedly descends into paranoia. The author convincingly portrays Alice's chaotic and isolated life, in which she is gripped by "unyielding, endless shame." It's a searing portrait of a woman on the brink.
Customer Reviews
Favorite book of 2025 . Highly recommended
I loved this story. It was genuinely entertaining, but more than that, it was comforting. Being inside a mind that felt familiar, seeing pieces of myself reflected back, hit in a real way. Reading it as someone who was diagnosed with a mental illness in adulthood, then looking back at my younger self and recognizing those same patterns and experiences, made it feel personal. It wasn’t just a story. It felt like shared ground.