Study Guide: A Mind That Found Itself Audiobook By Heidi L cover art

Study Guide: A Mind That Found Itself

The Complete Work Plus an Overview, Summary, Analysis and Author Biography

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Study Guide: A Mind That Found Itself

By: Heidi L
Narrated by: Nathan Beatty
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About this listen

The success of an autobiography can be measured by many different aspects. Some works are of merit for entertainment purposes alone. Many Hollywood celebrities find an audience for their life's story due to their willingness to share closely held secrets and peculiarities. We are drawn in because of the salacious promise of a glimpse into a life more glamorous or unusual than our own. There are autobiographies that are written in order to record a person's contributions to fields such as science or politics. Still, more find their way into publication in order to tell an inspiring story, to uplift, to stand as an example to humanity of the limitless potential of the human spirit and our ability to overcome adversity.

Clifford Whittingham Beers' A Mind that Found Itself - An Autobiography, fulfills all of these goals and yet achieves a much higher purpose. Beers records his personal journey to a place that few will ever visit, and far fewer will ever return. Beers' personal, detailed account of his descent into insanity, his two-year journey within public and private institutions, and his unusual recovery and mission afterward elevates this to much more than an autobiography. Beers' story invites us to see both the enormous shortcomings of the mental institutions of his time, but also the inner workings of his mind as he lost his grip on reality. Early in his institutional experiences, he vows to explore every ward and record every injustice.

Despite Beers' own acknowledgement of his loss of reason, he maintained enough direction to willfully contrive situations that would get him committed to wards with more advanced levels of security for patients deemed violent. He did this deliberately, for the purpose of his research. This autobiography, published when Beers emerged from his institutional life, led to a revolution in an understanding of insanity and the way the insane are treated in the United States.

©2015 Annotated Classics (P)2015 Annotated Classics
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What listeners say about Study Guide: A Mind That Found Itself

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    3 out of 5 stars
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Meh, I’ve heard better.

I did not particularly care for the narrator. He suffered from a horribly flat affect, and I am afraid that if I listen to him reach Shakespeare, that would be the last time I heard Shakespeare.

The book itself is long-winded. It does elucidate the problems with institutionalization at the turn of the last century, but the narrative could have been given in fewer words. The vocabulary was strong.

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A compelling narrative of mental illness

The true story of the author's psychosis and recovery over a century ago. The real thrust is the injustices he faced and perhaps exist even today. The summary at the beginning tells the story BUT do not get put off as the narrative is far more compelling

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2 people found this helpful

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    4 out of 5 stars

Only a summary of the book, as the title states

What could have made this a 4 or 5-star listening experience for you?

If only this had been read as the author wrote it. It's a shame this was just an attempt to summarize his writing.

Would you ever listen to anything by Clifford Whittingham Beers and Heidi L again?

I would love to listen to anything written by Beers, but only if it's being read word for word, page for page, as Beers wrote it, not a modern summary.

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A great book betrayed

This is unquestionably the worst reading of a book I have heard on Audible. Tediously pitched, amateurishly paced, and infuriatingly affected, it destroyed my admittedly high expectations. How could anyone have passed this travesty through Audible’s multiple levels of authorization? I look forward to an expeditious refund or exchange. Unfortunately, I can do nothing about the execrable taste this performance has left in my mouth; but time heals all wounds….

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