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Annie's Ghosts: A Journey Into a Family Secret by Steve Luxenberg
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Annie's Ghosts: A Journey Into a Family Secret

by Steve Luxenberg

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19110130,576 (3.86)41
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Hyperion (2009), Hardcover, 416 pages

Member:nicole
Collections:Your library, FavoritesRating:*****
Tags:review copy
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This is a wonderful journal of discovery of a family secret. ( )
  andyg227 | Dec 6, 2009 |
“Though we share so many secrets
There are some we never tell”

The Stranger by Billy Joel

When journalist Steve Luxenberg discovers after his mother’s death that she was not an only child, bur rather had a physically and mentally disabled sister, Annie, he embarks on a journey to uncover the truth behind his mother’s secret. What he discovers is a societal and legal system that for decades sequestered the mentally ill and disabled into institutions – leaving behind few traces of the person institutionalized. And on a personal level, he gains insight into his mother’s abandonment of Annie. Luxenburg surmises that his mother felt compelled to keep her sister’s existence a secret because at that time (the 30’s - 40’s) “psychiatry was a long way from curing the seriously ill; and . . . genetics [were believed to] be a factor.”

Although Luxenberg’s quest does not uncover all the answers to his questions he expresses overall satisfaction with the results. He reflects that “my search has allowed me to achieve a freedom of my own: free to see my mother as she was, free to embrace her flaws and accept her choices, free to put aside, once and for all, [and] the pain of not being able to help her . . .”

Annie's Ghosts is a fascinating detective story/memoir of one son’s determination to understand.

Publisher: Hyperion (May 5, 2009)
Review Copy Provided Courtesy of the publisher and FSB Associates. ( )
  kimspam66 | Nov 27, 2009 |
I put off reading this book for many months; while I was initially interested in the topic, I decided this was probably not the right time in my life to be reading about mental disease and institutions. Still, as an Early Reviewer I felt I owed the publishers an honest review, so I made myself read the first 50 pages with a goal of reading a minimum of 100, but couldn't get that far. I found the first few chapters rather tedious with the author delving into every single detail of how he worked through red tape, bureaucracy and archives to uncover the existence of his aunt. I guess that’s understandable given that the author is a journalist, but for this reluctant reader it was definitely not the stuff that page-turners are made of.
  Smiler69 | Oct 5, 2009 |
Inside Annie's Ghosts is a terrific long article. Unfortunately for me, the story has been stretched out to a book length one that the material just does not justify.

The story of Mr. Luxenberg's forgotten aunt is interesting and does provide a look at a chapter of American history long denied, but it could have been better told in fewer words. ( )
  CBJames | Oct 3, 2009 |
“A Journey into a Family Secret” is the subtitle of Annie’s Ghosts, a memoir and a family history uncovered by an investigative reporter. There are secrets in every family. If parents keep secrets from their children, how far should the children go to uncover the truth after their parents’ death? The memories of the son change with the new knowledge of the story of his mother's life. He begins to understand her despair, but he feels also great pain that his mother was never able to share her pain. Her despair can be felt between the lines of the memories recalled by the son.

Steve Luxenberg's mother had a physically and mentally disabled sister who was committed to a psychiatric hospital at age 21.
Her diagnosis was "undifferentiated schizophrenia". The author soon learns that Annie was born at the wrong time, when mental illness was not understood very well, and mental hospitals would keep patients indefinitely because they were too great a burden for their families. The story gets a bit lengthy as Luxenberg fights with probate courts and archive gate keepers to obtain his aunt's medical records, but it is fascinating when he locates distant relatives, friends and neighbors who knew his mother's family when Annie still lived at home.
  elwetritsche | Sep 15, 2009 |
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Epigraph
Dedication
To Mom and Annie, too late to be set free;
to "the 5,000," who still might be;
and to Mary Jo, who stands alone
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The secret emerged, without warning or provocation, on an ordinary April afternoon in 1995.
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AMAZON description:
Beth Luxenberg was an only child. Everyone knew it: her grown children, her friends, even people she'd only recently met. So when her secret emerged, her son Steve Luxenberg was bewildered. He was certain that his mother had no siblings, just as he knew that her name was Beth, and that she had raised her children, above all, to tell the truth.
By then, Beth was nearly eighty, and in fragile health. While seeing a new doctor, she had casually mentioned a disabled sister, sent away at age two. For what reason? Was she physically disabled? Mentally ill? The questions were dizzying, the answers out of reach. Beth had said she knew nothing of her sister's fate.Six months after Beth's death in 1999, the secret surfaced once more. This time, it had a name: Annie.
Steve Luxenberg began digging. As he dug, he uncovered more and more. His mother's name wasn't Beth. His aunt hadn't been two when she'd been hospitalized. She'd been twenty-one; his mother had been twenty-three. The sisters had grown up together. Annie had spent the rest of her life in a mental institution, while Beth had set out to hide her sister's existence. Why?
Employing his skills as a journalist while struggling to maintain his empathy as a son, Luxenberg pieces together the story of his mother's motivations, his aunt's unknown life, and the times in which they lived. His search takes him to imperial Russia and Depression-era Detroit, through the Holocaust in Ukraine and the Philippine war zone, and back to the hospitals where Annie and many others were lost to memory.
Combining the power of reportage with the intrigue of mystery, Annie's Ghosts explores the nature of self-deception and self-preservation. The result is equal parts memoir, social history, and riveting detective story.

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