Reviewed by: Arthur Graham
Genre: General Fiction
Approximate word count: 55-60,000 words
Availability
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Author:
A New
Englander by birth and disposition, Ken Weene was trained as a minister and
psychologist and has worked as both an educator and psychotherapist. Now in
semi-retirement, he lives with his wife in Arizona.
Description:
Several
streams of narrative flow together in this panoptic examination of life, death,
and all the madness in between.
Appraisal:
I must
admit that I didn’t have very high expectations going into this. Like most
books by unfamiliar authors, I could only hope for the best while preparing for
the worst. Luckily for this cynic, however, Memoirs
from the Asylum turned out to be well worth the time spent reading it.
The title
seems purposefully ironic. Merriam-Webster defines “asylum” as “an inviolable
place of refuge and protection,” but could such a place actually exist? With 58
chapters divided between a mental institution and the equally mad world beyond
its walls, this book would seem to answer “no.” In the narrator’s repeated references
to his raging uncle’s depiction of a foundering ship, forever unfinished upon
its easel, the overall message seems to be that “there is no asylum, no
sanctuary, only the endless gray of the tossing seas of the endless paintings
of our endurance.”
Paradoxically,
the only asylum to be found anywhere is within the patients themselves, even as
they become prisoners to their own tormented thoughts. Regardless of their
individual limitations and psychoses, they can each take solace in whatever
measure of freedom still exists in their heads – provided it hasn’t been
completely cut, shocked, or drugged out of them already.
Marilyn for
instance, the resident catatonic, hasn’t moved a muscle in years. Instead, “she
sits inert in her room. She stares at the crack in the wall opposite her bed.
She stares at nothing, and she sees the world.” It is a world inhabited by her
childhood sweetheart, her dead mother and brother, and their beloved family
dog, taking turns in each others’ roles while perpetually morphing into
penises, balls of excrement, and various other objects across a range of
fantastical scenarios.
The
scatological motif is fitting, given how the patients are typically treated –
like crap. One callous orderly “look[ed] more like he should [have been] working
in a steel mill or chopping down trees,” the narrator tells us. “but there are
no mills, mines, or forests, not around here. We’re the industry, the factory:
human waste management at its most medical.”
If they’re
not written off or forgotten altogether, the patients are routinely abused by
those in position to do so. This is what inevitably happens wherever power is
exercised over those with few, if any, rights as human beings. With the
exception of one empathetic doctor and a handful of workers, most of the staff
seem more interested in pushing pills and preparing budget reports than
providing any kind of real care.
Mind you,
the patients aren’t the only loons in this bin. Everyone else gets to go home
at the end of the day, but given the pathological nature of the world outside,
it comes as no surprise that they all have certain “issues” of their own.
Everyone is crazy, but everyone knows this deep down. The world itself is an
insane asylum, but once again, there is no point in telling this to those of us
forced to live in it. Weene is adept at showing this, though, and he does so
with a panache that would make the
narrator’s departed cousin, Stan, whoop for the sheer joy of it.
The book
comes to a rather predictable conclusion, but that’s probably just because
there’s no other conclusion to be drawn. Upon his release, it doesn’t take our
narrator long to rediscover all of the awful, maddening things that led him to
commit himself in the first place. What keeps him going is “the possibility of
something better, of something however fragile rising from momentary glory,
from a lavender and apricot moment of joy.” The book isn’t quite as flowery as
all that, or even as dismal as the image of the foundering ship mentioned
earlier. It’s a lot of different, contrary things, but what else should we
expect from a book about insanity?
Format/Typo Issues:
The Kindle
version I read could do with a major formatting overhaul.
Rating: ***** Five stars
7 comments:
Ths is a great book by a masterful author. Ken Weene writes about real people and real life in all his novels, which are equally excellent reads. As a reviewer I gave him five stars for every book I reviewed.
Ths is a great book by a masterful author. Ken Weene writes about real people and real life in all his novels, which are equally excellent reads. As a reviewer I gave him five stars for every book I reviewed.
Would like to cast a vote for this book as the winner of contest. Read it with rekindled memories of working as an externe med student in a county institution all too similar to the Asylum. Ernest Griffith e.griffith@cox.net
I would also like to cast a vote for this book as the winner of the contest. It is a wonderful 5 star book on a slice of real life and Ken Weene is an excellent writer.
Just one of those rare hard-to-put-down novels...an outstanding read
Apparently this is the form in which we place our votes.
I reviewed Asylum some time ago and found it to be an interesting read.
I am happy to place my vote for this book.
For those who are trying to vote for Mr Weene's book in the Readers' Choice Awards by commenting on this post, this is NOT how to do it. Votes will only be counted by selecting the book in the form on this page:
http://booksandpals.blogspot.com/2013/03/2013-readers-choice.html
There you'll see a form that shows an Amazon Gift Card at the top and several drop down boxes (one of which says "Your vote in the Contemporary Fiction category" (which is where you'll find this book. If you see the picture of the gift card (blue and black, says Amazon Kindle on it), but don't see the drop down boxes below it, then you'll need to sign on first, either with your Facebook account or email (two buttons below the gift card picture).
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