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Detour : My Bipolar Road Trip in 4-D
Detour My Bipolar Road Trip in 4D
Author: Lizzie Simon
By all appearances, Lizzie Simon was perfect. She had an Ivy League education, lots of friends, a loving family, and a dazzling career as a theater producer by the age of twenty-three. But that wasn't enough: Lizzie still felt alone in the world, and largely misunderstood. Having been diagnosed with bipolar disorder as a teenager, she longed to...  more »
ISBN-13: 9780743446600
ISBN-10: 0743446607
Publication Date: 6/18/2003
Pages: 224
Rating:
  • Currently 3.6/5 Stars.
 27

3.6 stars, based on 27 ratings
Publisher: Washington Square Press
Book Type: Paperback
Other Versions: Hardcover
Members Wishing: 0
Reviews: Member | Amazon | Write a Review

Top Member Book Reviews

reviewed Detour : My Bipolar Road Trip in 4-D on + 6 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
This book definitely gave me some insight into what it is like for people to have bipolar. I did want more from the story...but I am not quite sure what it was the book was missing.
Overall, I was left feeling very happy for Lizzy Simon.
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clarajolie1 avatar reviewed Detour : My Bipolar Road Trip in 4-D on
The chapters are short, but don't let that fool you.

It's the stigma of mental illness she addresses that makes this book great. Stigma is one of things even the best writers do not bring up in the conversation. Yet it soaks mental illness to the point even mental health care professionals will belittle their clients, saying they are not trying hard enough. The guy on the street sees a poster saying mental illness is being helped because the stigma is dying out, and he writes, who are these people? All we know is they have guns. And they are killers!

Simon comes from a dream life, read: privileged, but the best thing it gives her is school in Paris instead of America, and she runs through Columbia University, and gets a producers job even before she graduates. But always that question, tell?, yes? no?

Is it a myth that society no longer cares if you jump up on the top of the filing cabinet while talking to your doctor, just to be higher up, like a cat?

It's no myth, it's still there, breathing its horrible breath down in the basement. Simon finds this out when she interviews successful young people on her Detour, all over the US, and finds every one of them keep their bipolar illness to themselves. Don't ask, don't tell.

And always the Med question. Another, yes? no? Hospitals, yes? no?

It's a great book, but even after Simon goes from one end of the US to other, The. Stigma. Is. Still. There.
love-2-read-46 avatar reviewed Detour : My Bipolar Road Trip in 4-D on + 8 more book reviews
Interesting first- person account! I felt like I was a bug on her wall witnessing and hearing life as she experienced it. Conversational style writing. Quick read!


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