The questions that follow are designed to enhance your group's reading of Susanna Kaysen's Girl, Interrupted . We hope they will provide you with new ways of looking at--and talking about--a book whose style and subject matter are equally provocative.
In 1967, after a session with a psychiatrist she'd never seen before, eighteen-year-old Susanna Kaysen was put in a taxi and sent to McLean Hospital. She spent most of the next two years in the ward for teenage girls in a psychiatric hospital as renowned for its famous clientele-Sylvia Plath, Robert Lowell, James Taylor, and Ray Charles-as for its progressive methods of treating those who could afford its sanctuary.
Kaysen's memoir encompasses horror and razor-edged perception while providing vivid portraits of her fellow patients and their keepers. It is a brilliant evocation of a "parallel universe" set within the kaleidoscopically shifting landscape of the late sixties. Girl, Interrupted is a clear-sighted, unflinching document that gives lasting and specific dimension to our definitions of sane and insane, mental illness and recovery.
"Poignant, honest and triumphantly funny. . . [a] compelling and heartbreaking story." --Susan Cheever,
The New York Times Book Review"Tough-minded . . . darkly comic . . . written with indelible clarity."--
Newsweek"[A]n account of a disturbed girl's unwilling passage into womanhood...and here is the girl, looking into our faces with urgent eyes."--Diane Middlebrook,
Washington Post Book World