From Library Journal
Afflicting more than ten million Americans each year, asthma is a disorder characterized by repeated episodes of chest constriction, difficulty exhaling, coughing, and (sometimes) wheezing, triggered by any number of factors ranging from allergens to cold air to emotional stress. Hypervigilance about environmental triggers is draining physically and emotionally but necessary to prevent additional attacks. Like Tim Brookes in Catching My Breath (LJ 7/94), DeSalvo (Vertigo: A Memoir, LJ 7/96) charts her personal journey through the chronic chameleon that is asthma as she searches for the root causes of her "breathlessness." Her emphasis is less on therapeutics (although there is a fascinating brief on the historical treatments for asthma) than on the effect a chronic illness has on one's productive capacity. She examines the mind-body connection in her own life?including childhood sexual abuse and a sister's suicide by hanging?and in those of other asthmatic writers such as Marcel Proust and John Updike. Recommended for health and holistics collections.?Anne C. Tomlin, Auburn Memorial Hosp. Lib., N.Y.
Copyright 1997 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
DeSalvo recounts developing adult-onset asthma, which sapped her vitality and threatened her ability to work. She examines her breathlessness as an illness and as a response to pollutants and early traumas (meditating on her body's "betrayal," she sees warnings of the illness in childhood sexual abuse and the scar of her sister's suicide), and she tells of her persistent battle with the medical establishment for accurate diagnosis and effective treatment. A literary biographer herself, DeSalvo presents, besides her own experiences with asthma, the lives of, among other writers who endured the malady, Marcel Proust and John Updike, and also the asthmatic characters in their fiction, in an attempt to analyze asthma's effect on self-esteem and artistic productivity. Her oddly gripping book will especially interest anyone concerned with how trauma affects health.
Whitney Scott
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.