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Passing for Normal: A Memoir of Compulsion by Amy S. Wilensky
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Passing for Normal: A Memoir of Compulsion

by Amy S. Wilensky

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70589,644 (3.32)10
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Broadway (2000), Paperback, 224 pages

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Showing 5 of 5
Not much to say about this one, as it pretty much does what it says on the label. Amy Wilensky tells her story: how she started to develop odd physical tics as a child, how these developed into full-blown tics, rituals and obsessions which dominated her life, and how she battled those around her - and herself - until she finally got her diagnosis and started learning how to live with her disorders.

There are some mistakes in the book which could have been ironed out, and Wilensky doesn't always come across as a particularly pleasant young woman, particularly at the beginning. She warms up towards the end of the book, so it's hard to tell whether to attribute her less savoury side to honesty and self-deprecation, recreation of her feelings as a child, or to pure self-obsession. Either way, it's a fine line and she sometimes appears very selfish and rude, seeming to think little about the feelings of those around her even in the retrospect allowed by the autobiographical form. Towards the end, as her understanding of her disorders improves, she detaches a little and this uncomfortable self-interest lessens in favour of genuine insight.

In conclusion - an interesting book, but perhaps a different one might have been better suited to gaining insight from outside the disorder. It is actually a pretty mundane autobiography, which could have been vastly improved by including information gleaned from her own research (which is mainly confined to a couple of pages in the Afterword) to balance out her own rambling everyday experiences. This one might appeal more to people who suffer - or think they might suffer - from Tourette's and OCD, as they can gauge their own experiences against Wilensky's. Contact details for two major OCD and Tourette's associations are included at the end of the book, which might also prove useful - though they may be American institutions rather than international ones. Worth a read but nothing special. ( )
  elliepotten | Jun 14, 2009 |
About: A biography of a woman with Obsessive Compulsive Disorder and Tourette's Syndrome.

Pros: Interesting, quick read

Cons: Wilensky tries for the typical inspirational ending, but it feels very out of place with the rest of the book. ( )
  charlierb3 | Jan 13, 2009 |
Amy did an excellent job of describing the symptoms and difficulties of Tourette's and OCD from an insider's perspective. It was odd because sometimes, I really felt connected with Amy as a person, and other times, I felt like she was lecturing me on technical things. I guess...it just didn't really seem to flow.
It's not a book I will buy, or ever read again, but I am glad I read it.

One more thing, I read another book by Amy Wilensky, another memior. It's called "The Weight of It" and it's about Amy's sister's struggle with obesity. Reading the other book, I had no hint or clue that Amy herself lived with Tourrette's and OCD. Also, I noticed, reading this book I had no hint about Amy's sister's struggles with her weight. I sort of expect books involving the same 'characters' (even though these are real people, especially because these are real people) to have some sort of ....well, similarities at least. Reading the two books, it almost seems like the Amy in the book about Alison's weight is an entirely different person than the Amy in the book about Amy. It's less important to me that Alison seem like the same person, because Alison is not often mentioned in Amy's book about herself , but it is impossible for Amy to write about Alison without talking about herself. I don't know. I guess it bothered me because I had an idea of who Amy was both as a person and a writer from "The Weight of It" and then she seemed completely different in "Passing for Normal." I understand that the two books had very different themes, and it's good to focus on just one subject or theme, but I just don't get how she could write another book that is also mostly about herself and her family and have it seem like it's about two different families. ( )
  lilyfyrestorm | Nov 29, 2008 |
With non-fiction the synopsis usually tells you all you need to know really. However I thought I'd just add my thoughts so that if you're thinking about reading it I might help you make the decision :-)

I've read a fair few of this genre and when this was recommended to me a by a good friend from my reading group I was pleased. It was right up my street. It is typical of its genre in that it's someone's memoirs and yes it does all turn out alright in the end but I felt the journey from the first page to the last page is what makes it stand out.

It felt 'real', let me try to explain this. I can read memoirs forever (not the celebrity kind, but real ones) and I can read them with a sense of detachment and an imaginary pat on the shoulder for the writer safe in my own world knowing that it could never happen to me. This felt more gritty and substantial - she told it like it was.

'Passing For Normal' packs a lot of punches and is worth the read. It is informative whilst not ramming the theory down your throat. I was engaged and interested and didn't skim through any of it, which I sometimes find myself doing with memoirs as there are inevitably bits I'm often not wanting to know.

Read it! ( )
  SmithSJ01 | Mar 23, 2008 |
This is an interesting but flawed memoir of one woman's experiences with OCD and Tourette's Syndrome. The stuff directly relating to her experiences with these poorly-understood disorders is excellent and well-written. The memoir suffers overall, though, from a lack of organization in speaking about her personal relationships, particularly with her husband, Ben. I was extremely confused about their relationship; she would go from mentioning their honeymoon in one paragraph, to talking about him breaking up with her several pages later, and never explains just how they came to a truce in their relations. Her tics and the stress of living with someone else are mentioned as a major problem when she and Ben are living together post-college, but she never explains how the two of them worked this out. It's as though she felt including some of her relations with Ben was important to the memoir, but she was reticent about revealing too much. This is understandable, but the overall effect leaves the reader wondering just how the two of them make their lives toether work, if indeed they do. ( )
  Crowyhead | Jun 6, 2007 |
Showing 5 of 5
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Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 076790186X, Paperback)

I am crazy. But maybe I am not.  For most of her life, these thoughts plagued Amy Wilensky as her mind lurched and veered in ways she didn't understand and her body did things she couldn't control. While she excelled in school and led an otherwise "normal" life, she worried that beneath the surface she was a freak, that there was something irrevocably wrong with her.  Passing for Normal is Wilensky's emotionally charged account of her lifelong struggle with the often misunderstood disorders Tourette's syndrome and obsessive-compulsive disorder.  A powerful witness to her own dysfunction, Wilensky describes the strain it bore on her relationships with the people she thought she knew best: her family, her friends, and herself.  Confronting the labels we apply to ourselves and others--compulsive, crazy, out of control--Amy describes her symptoms, diagnosis, and her treatment with courage and a healthy dose of humor, gradually coming to terms with the absurdities of a life beset by irrational behavior.  This compelling narrative, by turns
tragic and comic, broadly extends our understanding of the won-drously complex human mind, and, with subtlety and grace, challenges our notion of what it is to be "normal."

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:17 -0400)

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