A poet recounts his experience with madness and explores the
relationship between apprehension and imagination.
In the summer of 1977, standing on a roadside somewhere between Dachau
and Munich, twenty-two-year-old Mike Barnes experienced the dawning of
the psychic break he'd been anticipating almost all his life. "Times
over the years when I have tried to describe what followed," he writes
of that moment, "it has always come out wrong." In this finely wrought,
deeply intelligent memoir of madness, its antecedents and its aftermath,
Barnes reconstructs instead what led him to that moment and offers with
his characteristic generosity and candor the captivating account of a
mind restlessly aware of itself.