"An identical illness shattered our lives and my only regret in retrospect is that I did not have access to your insightful book during that and other traumatic periods that have since followed. What a difference it would have made to my life!"
"My friend loaned me your book and I have devoured it. The feelings and experiences you describe fit what I have been experiencing. Your book has allowed me to accept my illness, returned my dignity, and given me hope for recovery. Thank you for the best gift I've ever received."
"I wish to thank you from the bottom of my heart for having written this book. It has helped me to understand the man I intend to marry. Thank you for giving me the opportunity to learn about manic-depression without suffering through textbooks heavy with statistics, figures, charts, and tables." -- Readers' comments
In this moving and enlightening book, the author tells how he came through that "holiday of darkness" and in so doing enables the reader to understand the illness of depression. The book is well written and personal, interweaving information about depression with the author's experience of it. He begins his story with what was happening in his life before he became depressed. Moving through the acute and chronic phases of the illness, he relates his experiences with treatment, the use of drugs and their side effects, his inability to cope with aspects of day-to-day living and his painful awareness of his illness and the fear it was producing within him. In later chapters, he discusses the treatment of depression using various drugs and electroshock therapy (ECT). His depression did recur; he describes how it was stabilized through drug regulation. He details the reaction to his illness by friends, professional colleagues, and family. Endler is to be commended for his courage, his insight, and his willingness to enable others to enter a "holiday of darkness" with hope. -- International Journal of Psychology
When professionals write of their own mental suffering it is helpful to think of what they are trying to say and why. Endler had a number of reasons. First, to help demystify depression and to bring the issues of stigma and our hypocrisy in dealing with mental health issues. Second, he offers clear insights into the experience of being depressed. He captures well the experiences of dread and anxiety, the loss of energy and of confidence, the slow spiral downwards and how depression, as he says, "begets depression." Third, he wishes to use his own experience to indicate his belief in the biological nature of at least some depressions, and indicate how various treatments, ECT and lithium, brought relief.
Endler is an excellent writer who carries the reader along in a good style of autobiographical writing. He writes with humility and warmth. This book is useful for what it is, a personal journey into and out of depression and its biological treatments. It deserves wide readership for this reason and people like Endler can only do good by making it clear that the stigma of mental illness lives in all our hears and in this we perpetuate people's sufferings. Sufferers of depression will find much here that is all too painfully familiar. -- British Journal of Psychology
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The journey out of depression as lived by... a psychologist,
This review is from: Holiday of Darkness: A Psychologist's Personal Journey Out of His Depression (Paperback)
I do believe that this book takes a whole new dimension by the fact that the author... both LIVED and lived THROUGH a depression AND is... a psychologist. He therefore has the academic knowledge as well as the life experience to express the "Holiday of Darkness".Another interesting fact... is that he was a "stable, athletic man, at the height of his career" when depression struck. So I believe it removes the stigma or prejudices that people may sometimes have on people that come to suffer from depression. It is not only an account; chapters cover treatment and treatment alternatives and finishes off with a very encouraging chapter "Where do we go from here".. that hints that there IS light after darkness.. Depression IS treateable! "eminently treatable" to quote the author!
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