Wow, what a major work. John Sedgwick is one of the younger members of the infamous Sedgwick family, a fixture of the East Coast bluebloods. In our generation, most of us may be familiar with the actress Kyra Sedgwick and/or Warhol girl Edie Sedwick (both are cousins of John). In this book, John takes a historic look at his ancestors, going all the way back to the 1700s, relying on published biographies, personal diaries and letters, public documents and first person accounts.
Most members of the family excelled in a variety of fields: politics, law, writing, athletics, etc. Excellence was expected from family members, especially the men, as each member and generation was taught to uphold the family credo. Woven through the historical account is John's discovery that an unusually high number of family members suffered from some form of mental illness, especially manic depression. Suicide runs rampant through the extended family.John is no stranger to this, having suffered a breakdown that, in part, spurred him to write this book. Most of the men in the family seemed to suffer from the biological aspect of the illness, while most of the women seemed to fall into depression after being physically and/or emotionally abandoned by their husbands, and in the earlier generations, falling apart after giving birth to up to a dozen children, many of whom died in infancy. The women who married or were born to Sedwick men were worn down by them from the promise of their youth: vivacity, beauty, talent, and ambition to desperate, addled, suicidally inclined shells of their former selves. Institutionalization was the Sedwick answer to this problem for both the men and the women, with early treatments for mental illness falling into the category of torture. Some of the family escaped this fate of course, but almost everyone seemed to exhibit some sort of aberrant or intolerant personality traits. John believes that the pressure of living up to the Sedwick reputation combined with biological tendencies towards emotional frailty resulted in the high incidence of extreme dysfunction. John, like some of his ancestors, ultimately became both depressed and hypomanic which resulted in the demise of his marriage, his wife saying that she was unwilling to live with his mood swings and expressing her need to protect their children. John receives successful modern treatment, but fully realizes that he is far from removed from the family curse.
The book is unbelievably well researched and very skillfully written, blending straight history with personal accounts and details to form an absolutely fascinating account his highly unusual genealogy.