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By William
L. Hamilton
NEW YORK -- The son of a pharmaceutical fortune, Andrew Solomon, a
writer, is living proof that money can't buy happiness. His latest
book, "The Noonday Demon," just released by Scribner ($28), is as its
subtitle states, "An Atlas of Depression," including three life-
strangling episodes of his own.
For a person who is, for now, the only serious historian of a sickness
that disables more people in the United States than any other -- 28
million Americans are taking selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors
such as Prozac -- Solomon and his problems make an incongruous pair.
As dapper as his drawing room, Solomon invited a reporter into his
house recently. The house, a 28-foot-wide, five-story-tall brownstone
on a prime block off lower Fifth Avenue, where Solomon, 37, lives alone
with his staff of two, was rebuilt and refurbished five years ago by
Robert Couturier, a French architect, in a large-scale style that could
be called "Student Prince."
With its silk brocaded sofas, doges' lanterns, Russian paintings, polar
bear rugs and Chinese dragon robes, the house is a principality that
exists in storybooks only -- part Eastern Europe, part Lubitsch's
Hollywood. A historical landmark because Emma Lazarus, the poet, lived
there, the blue plaque on the facade of Solomon's home quotes the
sonnet inscribed on the Statue of Liberty: "Give me your tired, your
poor, your huddled masses." Ironies are not lost on him. Solomon enjoys
them, like good dinner party anecdotes.
Mother's death
In recalling his depression, Solomon writes in "The Noonday Demon":
"One day, seven years ago, hell came to pay me a surprise visit," a
turn of events triggered, he thinks, by his mother's death. Carolyn
Solomon, in whom ovarian cancer was diagnosed in 1989, planned her
suicide during the terminal stage of her illness with her two sons,
David and Andrew, and her husband, their father Howard. That morning,
she made the tea and muffins to keep the pills down: 40 Seconals.
Forty-five minutes later she was dead. The last thing she told Andrew,
as he cried at her bed, was, "Enjoy what you have." Clearing out her
effects, he pocketed the Seconal she hadn't swallowed. He was 27.
Three years later he was trying to kill himself, not with pills but
with "economical" trips to a park in London for sex that he hoped would
infect him with HIV, as he writes, to die from terminal illness like
his mother.
Solomon is well now, though he argues in his expansively researched
book, which uses his own experience as a point of departure for a much
wider discussion of the subject, that depression recurs. It is
inexorable, like life when you choose it, he believes. Solomon takes
five medications daily: Effexor, Wellbutrin, Zyprexa, Topramax and
BuSpar. He speaks regularly with both a psychiatrist and a
psychopharmacologist. He tested negatively, again, for HIV last month.
The author of "A Stone Boat," a novel, "The Irony Tower: Soviet Artists
in a Time of Glasnost" and a regular contributor to magazines such as
the New Yorker, where the article that became "The Noonday Demon"
appeared, Solomon has called depression his "big career break." He
received a $1 million advance for the book.
"I certainly think it's possible that I'll change my mind at some
stage, and kill myself; I refuse to make any promises on that score to
anyone," he said. Solomon sat by a bed of tulips under an evening sky
as blue as his eyes. Wide oceans of expression, part of which is
dilation from drugs, part of which is his obvious absorption in things,
it is as though Solomon is looking out to sea continuously.
Father's connection
Depression produces emotional requirements of a home that happiness and
health don't. In extremes, home is like the skin -- either the edge of
safety or the thing you claw out of, unable to inhabit the identity it
represents.
Sensitive to settings as much as situations, during his sicknesses
Solomon alternatively hid in his own house, retreating to his bed, or
escaped to his father's apartment, too weak to wash.
Howard Solomon, chairman of Forest Laboratories in New York, a
pharmaceutical company valued at $12 billion, introduced
antidepressants like Celexa, which now competes in sales with Prozac,
because of a sudden urgency to help people like his son.
"He became interested in antidepressants, in part, because he had seen
how effective they were for me," said Solomon, who dedicates his book
to his father, "who gave me life not once, but twice." He credits his
illness with having brought them close. The elder Solomon fed and
bathed his son when Andrew became too disengaged to take care of
himself.
"I'm very proud of my father," Solomon said. "He's an entirely
self-made man. He grew up waiting on milk lines in the Bronx. His great
love was always music, and he got a job when he was 13 selling
librettos at the old Met because he loved opera. Now he's chairman of
the City Ballet and on the board of the opera."
When depression gripped him in 1994 -- in his book, Solomon describes
it as a tree being choked by a vine -- he was living in a loft on West
15th Street, designed as an elaborate disguise against the reality of
being a boy who was losing his mother.
"I was coming back to New York from London because my mother was dying,
and I had a nervous breakdown there," he said, chin tilted, hand to his
throat. "It was a place that looked rather glossy on the surface -- it
was quite chic looking, barren and austere -- and nothing in it worked,
including me. When I got it I wanted to be really tough, and live
downtown. I got some sadistic-looking metal furniture in Berlin and
that was all the furniture that I had. And I bought a leather jacket. I
didn't get any tattoos because I thought they'd age badly. But, I was
in the mood."
Reducing obligations
Solomon's second psychological storm hit during the move into the house
where he lives now.
The imposing house, bought in what he described as "a weird estate
sale," was a ruin -- not the best roof to put over your head when
you're depressive.
"It was falling down," Solomon said. "I didn't want to be here.
Everything I owned was in boxes. Everything was filthy. There were
construction people everywhere. I had a hateful housekeeper who was
trying to make me miserable, who actually subsequently wrote me a
letter and said that she'd been having a nervous breakdown at the
time."
Solomon rode it out -- adjusting his medications, staying again with
his father, stripping his obligations to a skeletal list and
disappearing.
"You'd leave messages," said Amy Fine Collins, a special correspondent
for Vanity Fair, and a friend of 11 years. "It was like he'd gone out
of town."
Five years later, the new house was home -- a fairly perfect
reflection, Solomon found, of himself.
"A mixture of rather wild and solid and bourgeois," he concluded. When
agreed with, he laughed. The elegant Solomon's laugh keeps him honest.
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