This very personal memoir has the potential to become a potent political manifesto ... Unshrunk will give [Trump and Kennedy] even more ammunition ... Delano’s description of her life off meds, liberated from the 'mental health industry,' isn’t exactly a portrait of wellness ... Delano has considerable skill as a memoirist. Her early chapters describing the alienation of a smart, sensitive, hyperaware teenager in an emotionally inhospitable universe cover Holden Caulfield territory in a new and highly engaging way ... Her account captures a number of ugly realities ... And yet, as the latest volume in a more-than-half-century-old strain of anti-psychiatry literature, Unshrunk is limited and highly predictable ... There’s much more accurate information, and deeper insight, available in the work of other sophisticatedly critical yet less polemical authors ... Like many mental health memoirs, Unshrunk suffers by sharing its author’s symptomology: In this case, it’s a study in black-and-white thinking.
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