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The Beast. a Reckoning With Depression

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To others, Tracy Thompson was an attractive woman and an outstanding journalist, with a rewarding career and a wealth of friends. But beyond that facade was a woman who struggled wit episodes of bleak depression. The Beast, as she later cam to call it, began stalking her during a girlhood spent in the traditional South of the 19060s and followed her during a into a busy newspaper career. Over the years the Beast undermined her love affairs, drove her into interminable rounds of "talk therapy', and resisted all her efforts to understand her periodic descents into despair. in 1990, just as her career took a leap forward with a new job at the Washington Post, the Beast reappeared with a vengeance - and she found herself in the worst free-fall yet, a patient in a locked psychiatric ward under 24-hour suicide watch. Now, with unsparing honesty, she tells the story of how she came to terms with the common mental illness, and how she began to fashion a new life of work,love and ordinary happiness.

Unknown Binding

First published August 1, 1995

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About the author

Tracy Thompson

24 books23 followers
I am a journalist, book author and editor. My most recent book, The New Mind of the South (Simon & Schuster), is a look at what my native region is becoming in the 21st century, and why it continues to be so misunderstood by Southerners and non-Southerners alike.

Before I started doing what I do now, I was a newspaper reporter for 15 years—-eight years at the Atlanta Journal-Constitution and seven years at the Washington Post. I've also written about mental illness, both my own and other people's, discovering in the process that one of mankind's most enduring afflictions is still shrouded in stigma, even today. If you ask me, that's just crazy! Those books, The Beast and The Ghost in the House, are what writers call "well reviewed," meaning the critics liked them but they never came close to the best-seller list. But they're still in print, and you can order them from my favorite independent bookstore, Politics and Prose, at https://www.politics-prose.com/.

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5 stars
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Displaying 1 - 23 of 24 reviews
Profile Image for Jake.
40 reviews11 followers
January 6, 2014
This book scares me.

My warning to anyone currently suffering from depression who is thinking of picking this book up: When I read this in high school while suffering from a pretty severe depression, it kinda knocked the wind out of me. All I did was sleep for like a week.

Her descriptions, her trip through the pain, felt very realistic and compelling. That's because it's very well written. As I empathized, my negative thinking and hopelessness were compounded and her pain fed into my own. Yuck.

Be careful you don't indentify too strongly with a static, destructive, view of yourself as depressed.
1 review
June 25, 2024
This book was introspective and honest in a way I haven’t experienced before. I really felt every peak and valley of the authors life and it gave a true mirror to depression and the inner workings of the mind. Would highly recommend for a firsthand view on the topic to anyone who has or has not experienced depression and anxiety.
Profile Image for James.
Author 15 books99 followers
December 12, 2007
A gifted journalist's account of her lifelong fight with, and ultimate victory over, clinical depression - this book is the source of one of my favorite quotes: "The unexamined life is not worth living... but the the unlived life is not worth examining." Educational and inspirational.
Profile Image for Liz.
137 reviews7 followers
January 27, 2010
This was an amazing book that I could so relate to! Her mother, like mine, lived in a Baptist orphanage. This book spoke to me in a way no other "self-help" book ever has. I would even say it was life changing.

Profile Image for Sharon cohen.
29 reviews1 follower
November 15, 2017
I loved the way she describes her emotions, but sometimes too many details on her job.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Megha.
157 reviews21 followers
March 13, 2017
Tracy Thompson is a brave woman to pen down her life, days, moments, good and bad with such honesty. There are many people who thinks mental illness is a synonym to madness and more still who will directly tag a person mad, more so in India.
Profile Image for Matthew.
1 review4 followers
August 25, 2016
A compellingly well-written memoir.

This was the first book I'd ever read which fully expressed how it feels to have depression - not just the 'grey cloud' of apathy and numbness, but also the intense episodes of self-loathing and self-destructive behaviours - and as such was enormously reassuring and even healing for me personally. While I'm tempted to recommend it to others struggling with depression, its accounts of compulsive behaviour, self-harm and domestic abuse would, I imagine, render it extremely triggering for many people.

(Which means that it's probably best aimed at people looking to understand depression in *others* - although the extreme nature of some of Thompson's experiences may lead some to assume that the author's depression was *caused by* the negative influences in her life - whereas many people suffer depression for no discernible reason & in fact having no concrete 'origin' is a leading cause of frustration in those affected by mental illness! It does, however, serve as an excellent chronicle of the thought processes and peculiar logic typical of depression.)

6 reviews
November 4, 2016
This book talks about Thompson's journey through depression. She uses this extended metaphor, ‘the beast’ to describe her depression. In the prologue of this novel Thompson talks about getting hit by a car that set her into a coma at a young age. She describes not being pretty enough nor good enough for anyone and this is a recurring issue throughout the novel. In this books she shows what it's truly like to be in the mindset of a depressed person. She expresses these feeling showing excerpts from her journals, in which she would write in when she could feel the beast coming. This book beautifully describes the perspective of a depressed person. She also talks of the time when she was admitted into the hospital for her depression and how that affected her career. I thoroughly loved this book and would recommend this to high school and up, due to its graphic and gruesome details in the experts of her journal. These journals entails he thoughts about committing suicide. But I truly believe that this will help inform the public on what depression truly is and I highly recommend it.
Profile Image for Bianca.
18 reviews2 followers
November 11, 2012
The beginning was hard to read because of the detailed descriptions of her dark times. As someone who deals with depression, it's very familiar. However, it was worth it. It was comforting to read the account of someone else's struggles. It's always good to know you're not alone.
Profile Image for Denise Merritt.
97 reviews6 followers
June 10, 2010
This book perfectly described my own walk with depression -- I couldn't believe how parallel her path was with my own. I highlighted the entire book!
Profile Image for Cyndee Cornell.
9 reviews
March 2, 2011
This book was great for anyone suffering from depression or if you know someone who is and you want to know more. Great descriptors for how a depressed person feels.
3 reviews3 followers
May 14, 2013
Not so much about depression as her life story. I didn't relate much.
Profile Image for Alison.
552 reviews40 followers
Read
December 23, 2013
Apparently I can't read books about mental illness when I'm having problems with a flare-up.
Profile Image for Kat.
12 reviews1 follower
January 3, 2014
It took a good chapter to get into it and they are long chapters. Once I got past the first chapter it was an interesting read!
32 reviews1 follower
July 21, 2014
I enjoyed the journey Tracy shares with us. It gives something to the soul to hear someone speak on things that most do not understand.

Heck yeah for you, Tracy! I loved your ending.
Profile Image for Samuel Barringer.
16 reviews
June 1, 2016
I think the book is very well written, and I find how Tracy explains depression to be very insightful.
Displaying 1 - 23 of 24 reviews

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