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Byline:
Michael Bronski
PW: You've said that you wrote The Noonday Demon (review, p. 63)
because it was the book that you wanted to read, but couldn't find,
when you became depressed. Its scope is unusually broad, moving from
autobiography to sociology to literary criticism. Did you envision this
wide range of approaches when you began writing it?
AS: I started off with a fairly broad agenda but it quickly grew. I
began by writing about my own experience, then interviewed other
people, and then went onto the obvious biochemical issues and the
psychology. From there I began to see that the book could really be a
window on the human experience. Most books on depression focus on one
idea--causes, self-help, science--but I wanted to grapple with the
complexity of the illness and the question, what does it mean to be
human?
PW: How much basic research did you have to do to gain an understanding
of the science and chemistry of depression?
AS: It's funny, I went to a serious scientific conference five years
ago and the very topics of the papers seemed hilarious in their
obscurity. But toward the end of writing the book, I went back to
interview many of those same people and their material seemed
straightforward. I essentially changed my whole educational focus and
became conversant with scientific knowledge I would never have dreamed
of knowing before. This is one of the ways that the book grew and made
me understand the complexity of the issues as well as my own
involvement with them.
PW: Up until now, you've been known as a novelist and as a social
commentator. Do you think that The Noonday Demon will change how people
see you as a writer?
AS: I hope so. I'll go on writing fiction, but my dream for my writing
is--and I hope this doesn't sound grandiose--that it will change
people's lives. I stumbled on this topic because of personal
experience, but I would like to see myself as someone whose writing
serves a moral purpose in the world.
PW: What surprised you most in your research?
AS:I think I was most surprised by the pervasiveness of the illness
across all cultures and boundaries and by the complex evolutionary
questions about the functions of moods. I was also surprised in
discovering how many different treatments were effective. I came out
thinking that there are a million different remedies and some work for
some people and some for others. I did not imagine that possibility
before.
PW: Is writing ever a way to overcome depression?
AS: Communicating is one of the best ways to overcome depression--talk
therapy, companionship, being able to express what you are
experiencing. There is no question that being able to get things down
on paper gives you control you didn't have before. Certainly that was
most satisfying to me as a writer and why I got into this business.
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