H

H

$22.00

In stock
0 out of 5

$22.00

SKU: 9780140243895 Categories: , , , ,
Title Range Discount
Trade Discount 5 + 25%

Description

Recommended reading by the National Mental Health Association. 
 
To his mother, twelve-year-old Benjamin Sherman is an object of pity and anxiety. To his father, he is bizarre and embarrassing. To his psychiatrist, he is a case study in mental illness. To the counselors at the camp where he is spending his summer, Benjamin is a “freaky kid” who shuns his peers and is strangely—and perhaps dangerously—attached to his best friend, Elliot, a stuffed letter H.
 
Through the letters of his sister, mother, father, camp counselors, and psychiatrist—and, most touchingly, through those Benjamin writes to Elliot—this audacious and utterly unsentimental novel gives us a moving and sometimes shocking intimacy with a child whose disorder may be a kind of fragile genius. H is an astute, sympathetic evocation of the state we persist in calling “madness.”
 
“A new and mind-boggling perspective on mental illness from the point of view of the sufferer and those who would love and care about him. . . . H is a very poignant, enthralling debut.”—The Boston Globe
 
“Shepard is a reverse archaeologist, designing a tiny contemporary lost world for readers to excavate. . . . Everything matters. . . Shepard gets everything right.”—New York magazineUS

Additional information

Dimensions 0.3800 × 5.1100 × 7.7100 in
Imprint

Format

ISBN-13

ISBN-10

Author

Audience

BISAC

Subjects

dark, Literature, grief, death, coming of age, literary, FIC019000, realistic fiction, courage, roman, novels, short stories, Friendship, german, sad, personal development, spirit, literary fiction, translation, psych, fiction books, books fiction, realistic fiction books, fiction psychological, anxiety, parenting, philosophy, inspirational, feminism, mental health, psychology, healing, spirituality, divorce, marriage, fiction, relationships, family, health, happiness, music, classic, emotional, romance, love, drama, infidelity, 21st century