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Malignant Sadness [Paperback]

Lewis Wolpert (Author)
4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (13 customer reviews)


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Book Description

February 19, 2001
Some years ago Lewis Wolpert had a severe depressive episode: despite a happy marriage and a successful scientific career, he could think only of suicide. When he eventually recovered, he became aware of the stigma attached to depression and of how difficult it was to get reliable information. So he undertook this written investigation into what science and psychiatry - and his own personal experience - could reveal about depression. Now with an additional introduction following the associated BBC2 series, this work also recounts the author's struggle with a second bout.


Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

After he captures the essence of his subject so succinctly in his title, it's a wonder that noted scientist Lewis Wolpert went on to write a whole book. Luckily for us, Malignant Sadness: The Anatomy of Depression lives up to its title, explaining the state of our knowledge and enlightening bystanders who have never been crippled by psychic pain about just what they're missing. Wolpert's training as a developmental biologist helps him sift through the scientific literature, while his devastating episode of depression is the base of his eloquent descriptions of its subjective experience. Far from a deficit, his lack of psychiatric training allows him to explore more freely the unclear and ambiguous depths of our understanding of this all-too-common ailment.

Given his background, one would expect Wolpert to emphasize biological causes and relief, but he gives psychological and environmental factors their due. As anyone with a debilitating disease will agree, any course of action promising recovery is worth pursuing, and Malignant Sadness carefully looks into many alternate explanations and therapies. Evolution, psychotherapy, Prozac and its ilk, and non-Western medicine all play roles in Wolpert's drama, and his engaging prose keeps the reader intrigued throughout. Either you or someone close to you is practically certain to be struck by some form of depression during your lifetime--read Malignant Sadness and be prepared. --Rob Lightner --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From Publishers Weekly

Depression is to sadness what cancer is to normal cell division, says Wolpert, a British biologist. Hence "malignant sadness," or depression, is sadness gone out of control. Unfortunately, this primer on depression for sufferers and those who care about them is for the most part as dry and clinical as a medical textbook. After an all-too-brief and moving description of his own experience with "malignant sadness," Wolpert takes a brief walk through medicine's knowledge of depression, then embarks on a detailed discussion of how depression is defined in the psychiatric handbook, the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders. In two provocative chapters, Wolpert discusses whether depression is a malady specific to the West, or whether it is found in all societies around the world (in general, his answer is that it exists in non-Western cultures but that there it tends to be expressed in physical rather than emotional symptoms). In a very thorough but dull chapter on who is susceptible to depression, he rattles off the results of study after study with little examination; some of the findings are familiar (women are more susceptible to depression than men, depression is to a large extent hereditary), others less so (postpartum depression has been found in cultures as different as Malaysia, Japan and Brazil). Wolpert does a thorough job of presenting all the important topics, from the biological roots of depression to its various treatments and their effectiveness, but much of this material is covered with more grace and warmth by Peter Kramer in Listening to Prozac and in Peter Whybrow's A Mood Apart. Agent, Anne Engel. (Mar.)
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 216 pages
  • Publisher: Faber & Faber (February 19, 2001)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0571207278
  • ISBN-13: 978-0571207275
  • Product Dimensions: 7.6 x 5 x 0.7 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 6.4 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (13 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #171,671 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

13 Reviews
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3 star:
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2 star:
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Average Customer Review
4.4 out of 5 stars (13 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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34 of 34 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A biologist explores depression; not a self-help book., April 7, 2000
By A Customer
Lewis Wolpert is an outstanding developmental biologist who has made major contributions to understanding the basic biology of how embryos grow. He also suffered from a bout of clinical depression, which caused to him investigate what is known of depression and how professionals think of the disease. The result of his investigations is this short book which limns our historical understanding of the disease, as well as the current molecular and psychological theories about the origins of the disease and a review of current therapies. I found the book useful in that it reviews a huge mass of scientific studies and that Wolpert views most of it with an appropriately critical eye. In the end, Wolpert is frustrated by our poor understanding of this disease, but he points out that certain therapies do work for a percentage of depressed people. So, this is likely to be a useful book for those interested in a critical appraisal -- wonderfully well and clearly written -- of what we think we know about depression. Though Wolpert does give some suggestions about therapies based on his own experience, this is not a self-help book, but rather a serious investigation of depression.
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24 of 25 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Important, Provocative, & Informative Book On Depression!, December 29, 2000
By 
Barron Laycock "Labradorman" (Temple, New Hampshire United States) - See all my reviews
(HALL OF FAME REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
In a time so significantly distinguished by mass dyspepsia and personal crisis, this book is a significant contribution to better public understanding. In a country so singularly obsessed with the simple-minded solution of feeling better through pharmaceutical support by way of Prozac, Zoloft and all the whole class of new central psycho-active and regulative brain drugs of that ilk, this book shines a bright and illuminating light into the morass of serious psychiatric darkness. Indeed, what is most striking and valuable about Wolpert's approach to this massively interesting and endlessly complex issue is the fact that he makes a great effort to explain and detail exactly where the current state of knowledge is about this often baffling and extremely debilitating affliction. Depression is so widespread and so commonplace that the public knows it by a variety of everyday names such as the blues, or being "off", or just as being down.

Few of us are unaffected by its massive effects, since either we ourselves or someone we know and love is so profoundly affected by its symptoms. He threads his way knowingly through a mountain of data and scientific literature, sifting out tidbits of knowledge from to help us understand just how Depression works its evil within us. His balancing act as both an observer and a sufferer from its effects make his perceptions especially acute and valuable, as his description of what the experience itself is like is a powerful demonstration of just how disabling depression can be. I must also admit that I found his views especially interesting since I admit to a long-standing personal bias against psychiatrists and mental health care professionals based on my own adolescent and adult experiences with depression, which left me suspicious of both physicians and psychiatric professionals who often seem all too ready for simple solutions such as simply medicating the symptoms away, refusing to deal with what one believes to be the underlying causes of the malady.

Certainly Wolpert mounts a wall of impressive research findings to support his own perceptions, and his combination of such data with his own experiences sounded a responsive chord in my own admittedly limited experiences. He does not disappoint the reader in the sense that while one expects him to over-emphasize biological causes and the subsequent recourse to pharmaceutical relief, yet Wolpert (to his considerable credit) also examines and evaluates both psychological and environmental factors their due. Thus, while admitting that the current theory that serotonin plays a major role in depression is given too much credence, he also admits that he believes that pharmaceutically altering brain chemistry may offer a major possibility for relief from depression in the future.

My only qualm concerning his approach or his intellectual stance is that he seems to underplay what many believe are overwhelming indications that social and cultural factors may significantly influence the onset of depression and also often exacerbate its symptoms. In this sense the book falls short of being truly comprehensive, for without due consideration of the ways in which such social factors contribute to and foster the development and extension of depression in its members, we can never truly understand the degree to which its development is a psychiatric, as opposed to philosophical, response by increasingly vulnerable and sensitive individuals to the manifest ills of a world gone absolutely bonkers. This is a book I highly recommend.

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16 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A True Comfort, March 30, 2000
Thank you so much! The true, down to earth feelings that the author expressed when depressed and the feelings that coinsided were 100%! In this country as he talks about diseases such as Cancer are sympathised about, not Depression. It is thought of as a "weak person's disease, which family and friends try to keep quiet." It's not wrong to be depressed and certainly not wrong to share what you feel, and thank you for telling the world just that in your book! It was a comfort and an affirmation that there are successful people who are depressed, and can overcome it, only when they and the people around them are willing to accept it! Thank you again!
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Until one has experienced a debilitating severe depression it is hard to understand the feelings of those who have it. Read the first page
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malignant sadness, depressed patients
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Hong Kong, United States, John Bowlby, Emil Kraepelin, New Guinea, Sri Lanka
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