Preview
  • American Breakdown

  • Our Ailing Nation, My Body’s Revolt, and the Nineteenth-Century Woman Who Brought Me Back to Life
  • By: Jennifer Lunden
  • Narrated by: Anna Caputo
  • Length: 12 hrs and 46 mins
  • 5.0 out of 5 stars (4 ratings)

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American Breakdown

By: Jennifer Lunden
Narrated by: Anna Caputo
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Publisher's summary

A Silent Spring for the human body, this wide-ranging, genre-crossing literary mystery interweaves the author’s quest to understand the source of her own condition with her telling of the story of the chronically ill 19th-century diarist Alice James—ultimately uncovering the many hidden health hazards of life in America.

When Jennifer Lunden became chronically ill after moving from Canada to Maine, her case was a medical mystery. Just 21, unable to hold a book or stand for a shower, she lost her job and consigned herself to her bed. The doctor she went to for help told her she was “just depressed.”

After suffering from this enigmatic illness for five years, she discovered an unlikely source of hope and healing: a biography of Alice James, the bright, witty, and often bedridden sibling of brothers Henry James, the novelist, and William James, the father of psychology. Alice suffered from a life-shattering illness known as neurasthenia, now often dismissed as a “fashionable illness.”

In this meticulously researched and illuminating debut, Lunden interweaves her own experience with Alice’s, exploring the history of medicine and the effects of the industrial revolution and late-stage capitalism to tell a riveting story of how we are a nation struggling—and failing—to be healthy.

Although science—and the politics behind its funding—has in many ways let Lunden and millions like her down, in the end science offers a revelation that will change how listeners think about the ecosystems of their bodies, their communities, the country, and the planet.

©2023 Jennifer Lunden (P)2023 HarperCollins Publishers
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MAKE REQUIRED TEXTBOOK READING IN SCHOOLS

This text by Jennifer Lunden is so thoroughly researched(backed by facts), so digestible and comprehensible. Both utterly maddening and utterly hopeful. I believe Jennifer Lunden has embodied Alice James as a woman who has come fully into her time.
Thank you for your perseverance in writing this manuscript 🩵

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Incredible insight

This book was a brilliant example of compelling narrative entwined with wide-ranging, in-depth interdisciplinary research on how cultural and material environments impact women’s health. From unraveling how ME/CFS became stigmatized through sexism and disinformation, to investigating poisoned Victorian wallpaper, to inspiring activism, this book has it all. Must read for all women with chronic illness.

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1 person found this helpful