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American Odyssey: Letters & Journals, 1940-1947 [Hardcover]

Wilhelm Reich (Author), Mary Boyd Higgins (Editor)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)


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Book Description

June 3, 1999
A new autobiographical work by one of the most original and controversial thinkers of our time.

"I looked up every day from behind the bars to the Statue of Liberty in New York Harbor. Her light shone brightly into a dark night." With these words, Wilhelm Reich described his experience as an "enemy alien" imprisoned on Ellis Island in the aftermath of the Japanese bombing of Pearl Harbor.

American Odyssey, compiled from his correspondence and journals, chronicles Reich's first years in America. They were years of prodigious accomplishment in which he developed the orgone energy accumulator-the so-called orgone box; published his first books in English; made breakthroughs in his investigation of orgone energy in social pathology, physics, astronomy, and cancer; and interested none other than Albert Einstein in testing his theories. America brought a new marriage, a new son, a new group of students, and a new laboratory. But these were years of fierce struggle as well: the denial of an American medical license, the refusal of a patent on the orgone accumulator, and, finally, a slanderous article that would incite the Food and Drug Administration to the dogged attack on Reich that would continue until his death in another prison cell ten years later.

American Odyssey reveals more than a period in the life of an embattled scientist. It discloses the social and intellectual life of a country in a tumultuous time in history.


Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

Wilhelm Reich--brilliantly insightful psychoanalyst or crackpot scientist? Perhaps both, though belying his reputation as a crackpot is the persistence with which adherents to his orgone theory still tout its application to everything from rainmaking to cancer. Clearly, though, he was a sensitive and deeply caring person who came to the U.S. from a war-torn Europe fully expecting to be welcomed as a man of science. American Odyssey: Letters and Journals 1940-1947 details his most intimate thoughts and communications with family, friends, colleagues, and, inevitably, harassers. His life was filled with high drama, his ego was suitably large for a man whose ideas (he felt) could save the world from itself, and his future was cloudy, but his spirit of perseverance shines throughout.

Despite brief incarceration as an "enemy alien," foreshadowing his eventual defeat at the hands of the FDA and the AMA, he became a loyal, patriotic American, seeing this country as a bulwark against the fascism and communism he knew all too well. The excitement he felt about his work speaks to us through his articulate journal entries, as does his paranoia, though, as the wise say, just because you're paranoid doesn't mean they're not out to get you. Unable to de-escalate the mounting struggle over orgone therapy, in 1947 Reich came under the first of many investigations that would finally put him in jail for the rest of his life. His fitting, closing words: "Once again man has killed a warming soul, stabbed a heart burning for him. Once again they gave power to their little sergeants." --Rob Lightner

From Publishers Weekly

Reich, renegade psychoanalyst and former disciple of Freud, arrived in the U.S. in 1939, fleeing Hitler's Europe and charges of charlatanism in Oslo. He spent the next decade in Forest Hills, N.Y., where he married German-born socialist Ilse Ollendorff in 1945, one year after the birth of their son. This compilation of his letters and journal entries, which swing from messianic rant to astute cultural commentary, is a revealing autobiographical document that opens a window onto a tortured soul. Arrested by the FBI in 1941 as a "dangerous enemy alien," Reich, an ex-Communist, spent more than three weeks detained on Ellis Island. Suspecting that his immigrant ex-wife, Annie Pink Rubinstein, had badmouthed him to FBI agents, he writes of his rancor toward her and of his troubled relationship with their two daughters. Seeking scientific support for his orgone energy accumulator, a simple box that supposedly captured primordial cosmic energy, which he alleged could help in treating many diseases including cancer, Reich met with Albert Einstein in Princeton for four hours. Einstein subsequently broke off their correspondence, convinced he had found a mundane explanation for the phenomena observed. Reich's other correspondents include Summerhill's A.S. Neill, social philosopher Paul Goodman and civil libertarian Roger Baldwin. Turning away from politics, Reich focuses his wrath on "the average 'little man'" whose conformity and psychological immaturity, he claims, make possible a Hitler or a Mussolini. He also discusses his move away from verbal psychoanalytic techniques to an emphasis on releasing energy blocks. Readers who can get past Reich's megalomaniacal posturing and quasi-scientific gobbledygook will be challenged by his forceful random thoughts on marriage, monogamy, fatherhood, suicide, war, Hitler, FDR, America, Nietzsche, Beethoven and sexual hypocrisy.
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 320 pages
  • Publisher: Farrar, Straus and Giroux; 1st edition (June 3, 1999)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0374104360
  • ISBN-13: 978-0374104368
  • Product Dimensions: 9.3 x 6.4 x 1.5 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.7 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,887,119 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A must-read for anyone interested in Reich's personality, July 26, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: American Odyssey: Letters & Journals, 1940-1947 (Hardcover)
American Odyssey is a lush garden filled with the innermost thoughts of Wilhelm Reich during the period he was establishing himself in America in the 1940's. He will have you smiling one moment and welling up with tears the next as you follow him through the maze of his lifework that evidences his being one of humanity's most creative and harrassed thinkers. Reich's concepts are certainly in line with free-thought today. His legacy of leaving his archives to the "children of the future," since they alone would most likely be the ones to understand and accept what he discovered, is falling nicely into place - exactly as Reich knew it would.
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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A superb book for anyone interested in Reich, February 13, 2001
This review is from: American Odyssey: Letters & Journals, 1940-1947 (Hardcover)
Wilhelm Reich was many things in his lifetime- a student of Freud, a political activist, a research scientist, and an inventor. His work was decades ahead of its time and is finally being rediscovered and reevaluated by the public. If, like me, you are interested in Reich and his work, you might want to check out a novel called We All Fall Down, by Brian Caldwell. it draws heavily on Reich's theories, particularly Listen Little Man and The Mass Psychology Of Facism. It's a great introduction to Reich's work and the entire novel draws heavily on his theory. It's very interesting watching an author explore his theories in a fictional setting. Well worth reading.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Sad, mad, but so goes the world, November 20, 2009
This review is from: AMERICAN ODYSSEY (Paperback)
This book provides a window into the private thoughts and life of Wilhelm Reich. The book provides a great deal of insight into a figure who most certainly seemed bitter at the world's reaction to his work on various levels. In this work you will find a great deal of private thoughts of bitterness towards the world.

At the same time you will see most likely misguided approaches to attempts to attribute orbital mechanics to orgone, messianic ravings, and private notes about his orgone experiments.

This is an immensely important work to anyone interested in Reich as a person. I highly recommend it.
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Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
mass psychology, unarmored life, orgone envelope, emotional pest, orgone biophysics, orgone rays, orgone radiation, orgone research, energetic functionalism, orgone ocean, blue bions, atmospheric orgone energy, orgone field, energy vesicles, mental hygiene work, control thermometer, orgone accumulator, tional plague, bion research, cosmic orgone, cancer biopathy, orgone therapy, spinning wave, orgasm theory, sex economy
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
New York, Orgone Institute, United States, Ellis Island, Ilse Ollendorff, The Cancer Biopathy, Atomic Energy Commission, Rockefeller Foundation, The New Republic, The Sexual Revolution, Orgone Research Fund, New Jersey, Big Game, The Function of the Orgasm, Commissioner of Patents, Miss Brady, Lake Mooselookmeguntic, West Coast, Forest Hills, French Academy, Otto Fenichel, Die Bione, Mildred Brady, Patent Office, The Orgonotic Pendulum Law
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