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The Great Pretender: The Undercover Mission That Changed Our Understanding of Madness

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For centuries, doctors have struggled to define mental illness-how do you diagnose it, how do you treat it, how do you even know what it is? In search of an answer, in the 1970s a Stanford psychologist named David Rosenhan and seven other people -- sane, normal, well-adjusted members of society -- went undercover into asylums around America to test the legitimacy of psychiatry's labels. Forced to remain inside until they'd "proven" themselves sane, all eight emerged with alarming diagnoses and even more troubling stories of their treatment. Rosenhan's study broke open the field of psychiatry, closing down institutions and changing mental health diagnosis forever.

But, as Cahalan's new research shows, very little in this saga is exactly as it seems. What really happened behind those closed asylum doors, and what does it mean for our understanding of mental illness today?

382 pages, Hardcover

First published November 5, 2019

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About the author

Susannah Cahalan

4 books2,604 followers
Susannah Cahalan is the New York Times bestselling author of "Brain on Fire: My Month of Madness," a memoir about her struggle with a rare autoimmune disease of the brain. She writes for the New York Post. Her work has also been featured in the New York Times, Scientific American Magazine, Glamour, Psychology Today, and others.

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Profile Image for Susannah.
Author 4 books2,604 followers
July 25, 2019
A writer friend always rates her own books. She explained that if she doesn’t love her own book enough to give it five stars, how can she expect anyone else to do the same? I like this mentality so here I go!
Profile Image for Julie Ehlers.
1,117 reviews1,603 followers
September 16, 2019
Back in the early 1970s, Dr. David Rosenhan published the results of a study wherein he and several other people (so-called “pseudopatients”), none of whom had ever had mental health issues, attempted to get admitted to psychiatric hospitals by showing up and claiming they heard a voice in their head saying “empty,” “hollow,” and “thud.” All of them got admitted on this basis, most of them receiving a preliminary diagnosis of schizophrenia. Once admitted, they behaved like their normal selves, but no one seemed to notice they were actually not mentally ill. The resulting article, “On Being Sane in Insane Places,” purported to show that (1) diagnosis of mental health issues was unreliable at best; and (2) patients in psychiatric hospitals were in fact not treated in ways that might actually be therapeutic.

When Susannah Cahalan heard about this study a few years ago, she was fascinated. Girl, me too. Rosenhan’s study put me in mind of Nellie Bly’s groundbreaking undercover investigation of an asylum, which she published in the 1880s as “Ten Days in a Mad-House,” and which I was obsessed with as a kid. Bly’s investigation is detailed in The Great Pretender, but Cahalan’s own interest was based on something more personal: Her harrowing experience of having her brain inflammation misdiagnosed as mental illness. If a determined doctor hadn’t discovered what was actually ailing her, her life may have turned out very differently.

Cahalan decided to find out everything she could about Rosenhan’s study, talking to his associates and even attempting to track down some of the other “pseudopatients” who took part in it. Without spoiling anything, what she discovered was very interesting, and The Great Pretender itself should have been similarly interesting. Unfortunately, this book had so many structural problems it was ultimately much more frustrating than fascinating.

Simply put, Cahalan should have made the Rosenhan study, how it was received, and her investigation into it the main plotline of the book. But she clearly did a ton of research and didn’t want any of it to go to waste, so there are many, many detours, for paragraphs, pages, or even entire chapters, into topics that are peripheral (the history of the Esalen Institute, for example) and/or can’t be discussed adequately here (overdiagnosing; replicability issues in research; imprisoning the mentally ill). Some of these details actually undermine the points she is trying to make—for example, she wants to claim that Rosenhan’s study caused the closure of psychiatric hospitals, resulting in a lack of support for the mentally ill, but a long detour into John F. Kennedy’s efforts to “help” the mentally ill shows that this was a problem well before Rosenhan came on the scene. All of this extra information not only makes the reading experience a slog; it also dulls the impact of the discoveries Cahalan herself makes. I truly wish someone had edited this book with an eye toward making it sharper and more concise; it would have made the book a more informative and memorable reading experience.

Cahalan understandably takes issue with the vague misdiagnosing that caused the “pseudopatients” to end up hospitalized, but she seems equally opposed to the much more detailed diagnostic criteria provided by DSM volumes that have appeared subsequent to the Rosenhan study. Does Cahalan offer her own solution to these problems? In a word, no—in the penultimate chapter of The Great Pretender she rails against the psychiatry and psychology professions in a way that’s nearly incoherent, and in the final chapter she purports to offer hope for the future, but some of the “advances” she names seem like quackery and pseudoscience, and the fact that psychiatrists are making more money than ever before hardly seems like the good news she thinks it is.

The book is also sloppy with facts in a way that gave me pause. She misuses the word “metastasize,” for example, and indicates that mammograms “prevent” breast cancer (they don’t, of course). She also makes much of the fact that Rosenhan published his article in Science rather than a more specialized journal, implying that Science would be less rigorous in its review and that its quick turnaround times necessarily meant its peer-review process cut corners. This implication struck me as irresponsible; it seems equally likely that Rosenhan wanted to be in Science because it was a prestigious and popular journal, and that its faster peer-review process might be a result of its large number of resources compared to other journals. I was left with the feeling that Cahalan, a former New York Post reporter, didn’t know much about scientific publishing, and it made me wonder what else was mere speculation on her part.

Some criticisms with the presentation of the book: The Rosenhan article itself wasn’t included here; neither were the responses to the study that other researchers published. Sure, it would have cost money for the publisher to obtain these reprint rights, but it would have made the entire experience of reading The Great Pretender much more informative. Additionally, Cahalan urges readers to educate themselves on these issues, but she doesn’t include a list of recommended reading; instead readers are expected to wade through the end notes for pertinent material. None of this adds up to a satisfactory learning experience.

As I said, this topic is fascinating to me, and it saddens me that I can’t recommend this book. In short, the whole thing should have been way more incisive. The less-pertinent info should have been edited way down; Cahalan’s unfocused screeds should have been shortened and made, well, more focused; and more resources should have been provided for the reader. It seems that The Great Pretender is meant to be some kind of challenge to the field of psychiatry to do better, and while that’s a worthy goal, Cahalan hasn’t done much here besides meet their fuzzy thinking with fuzzy thinking of her own.

I received this ARC via a Shelf Awareness giveaway. Thank you to the publisher.
Profile Image for Trevor.
1,523 reviews24.8k followers
December 6, 2020
This is the year where I have gotten to learn that so many of the social psychology experiments I’d always assumed to have been completely above board are actually anything but. The Milgram, the Stanford prison, those experiments on the effect of plate size on how much you eat, and even the great marshmallow of delayed gratification – the real story behind each of these being somewhat different from the marketing hype. And learning that has proven to be deeply disturbing, because people have made real-world choices and decisions on the marketed version of those experiments. Decisions that have had lasting consequences on many, many people’s lives.

This book is also about one of these big experiments – Here’s the short version.

Being a social psychology experiment, of course, it involves deception. That fact alone makes me uneasy with the whole field, but let’s trudge along regardless. A group of people turn up at mental institutions across the country and claim that they can hear voices. The voices aren’t particularly nasty or anything. They say a group of words that imply emptiness. This is all the potential clients claim – they don’t claim to want to have sex with their mum or anything like that, just voices saying no more than “Thud, Empty, Hollow”. They are all admitted to hospital for various (and surprisingly long) times and they all left with a diagnosis of schizophrenia or depression. The paper that came out of this experiment spoke of how easy it is to fool the ‘doctors’ working in this field of diagnosis.

But it turns out that the ‘patients’ might not have merely said they were hearing voices. They might have said that they were considering suicide. They might have had the voices saying other things. They might have actually acted much more insane than was written up in the paper following this experiment. Still, the problem remains of a little craziness having very, very large consequences.

We have all seen the films – Who Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest – say, and we’ve all been outraged by how impossible it is to prove you are sane once you have been marked as insane. Goffman (something of a hero of mine) discusses this in a couple of his books too – Asylum and Stigma – and he gets mentioned here too, along with Foucault’s A History of Madness. I’ve read that too. I found it a bit uncomfortable reading this and feeling my perspective change on some of these questions. I guess like many other people, I’ve often thought of mental institutions as a close approximation to hell-on-earth. Needlessly cruel, acting out unspeakable inhumanity, the sorts of places that could reasonably have a sign above the door with ‘abandon all hope all ye who enter’ written on it. Closing them down was one of the truly liberating actions of the later part of the 20th Century – good riddance, and all that…

This book has made me aware of some shades of grey. It certainly isn’t that we need to reopen such hospitals and pump people full of drugs to keep them chemically restrained. Or to lacerate their brains to pacify them, or to give them electro-convulsive therapy to see what happens. The problem is that we closed these hospitals down and then dumped people with mental illness onto the street and left them mostly to care for themselves. The one constant in this story seems to be society’s utter lack of care for these incredibly vulnerable people. We saw a terrible situation, one where those who were being badly treated were concentrated in one place, and so we dispersed them, making it easier for us to pretend we couldn’t see what was going on anymore. Or we then put them into prisons – where we could define them in ways that made us their victims, rather than the other way around.

Obviously, Rosenhan’s experiment can’t be held solely responsible for all of this – no one event or person ever really is – but the experiment was clearly a sign of the times and the sort of clear example that made arguing against it seem to be about vested interests or akin to being the moral equivalent of pure evil. What I found most interesting is that Rosenhan had his paper published in Science – a generalist publication – but the author says that it would have been very unlikely to ever have been published in a specialist journal. This is because his evidence was so thin. In fact, the author suspects that a lot of his evidence was actually made up. That he only sent a couple of people into these hospitals and mostly just made up the rest of his data. We might never know if this is the case or not, but it seems possible given some strange facts about the data.

There was also the problem with one of the people she was able to track down who had been part of the experiment. His data hadn’t been included, it seems, because he was treated really well in the hospital he went to and he felt they couldn’t have been more helpful. Needless to say, normally in science you don’t dump results that go against your hypothesis, in fact, the whole point of an experiment is to disprove your hypothesis.

And this wasn’t the only problem with the experiment. It seems that the whole ‘we only said one thing and got dumped into the snake pit’ was a bit of an exaggeration too. It seems that rather than just saying ‘I’ve been hearing voices’ – they also said that their lives were falling apart, that they had been contemplating suicide and had even been socially isolating. Rather than the experiment being about how easy it is to get into a mental hospital, as Seymour Kety is quoted, rather colourfully, as saying of the experiment: “If I were to drink a quart of blood and, concealing what I had done, come to the emergency room of any hospital vomiting blood, the behavior of the staff would be quite predictable. If they labeled and treated me as having a bleeding ulcer, I doubt that I could argue convincingly that medical science does not know how to diagnose the condition.”

I really liked this book. What I liked most about it is that it is a couple of books in one. I don’t think the point is to come away from this book saying, ‘Bloody Rosenhan – made the whole damn thing up’ – but rather to see that some ideas are imminent, but that science ought to strive to be above what is in the air. I’m not entirely convinced it ever really can get beyond this, but I do think more of an effort could be expended than was clearly done here. Rosenhan is one of a largish group of scientists who have ‘known’ the truth and have been prepared to bend their data to make it conform. As the author also makes clear, many of those who knew his results were a bit smelly, still used them for their own ends.

I don’t want this to be a review that says, look at how we have been fooled by what this one man did. The point is, we wanted to be fooled. The ultimate fact is that if we want to know what we really think of the mentally ill, just look around at how we continue to treat them. Foucault says in his History of Madness that madness came into being as leprosy was being Irradicated in Europe. And we had these large hospitals and no one to put into them. That might be going too far, or it might not be. It is always hard to tell with the past. However, we are certainly overdue a new experiment to shame us again over our treatment of the mentally ill.
Profile Image for Jennifer ~ TarHeelReader.
2,785 reviews31.9k followers
October 31, 2019
Have read Susannah Cahalan’s deeply personal memoir, Brain on Fire? She has followed-up that best-selling book with The Great Pretender, which exposes the suspenseful mystery behind an experiment that shaped modern medicine and mental health as we know it today.

David Rosenhan and his brave colleagues entered asylums undercover in order to come out diagnosed out the yin-yang, but better able to expose the atrocities and systemic problems in mental health treatment at the time. On top of that, Cahalan exposes the untold mystery within the mystery.

I received a complimentary copy from the publisher.

Many of my reviews can also be found on instagram: www.instagram.com/tarheelreader

Profile Image for D.
508 reviews25 followers
November 16, 2019
Very disappointing. This book is rather poorly written and its approach is exceedingly scattered. In my opinion, the author is not really qualified by either education or experience to write about the topics discussed. The actual purpose of the work remains elusive to the reader. Cannot recommend either the purchase or taking the time to read this.
Profile Image for Book of the Month.
317 reviews17.3k followers
Read
November 1, 2019
Why I love it
by Maris Kreizman

Susannah Cahalan was not okay. Over the course of a month she went from being a fully functioning young reporter to suffering from psychosis and hallucinations, a step away from being diagnosed with schizoaffective disorder. In her devastating 2012 memoir, Brain On Fire, Cahalan details how a neurological disease not only caused her body to attack her brain, but also caused her to question her own sanity.

Susannah is fully recovered now, but what would have happened to her if her diagnosis of mental illness had stuck? This is what she grapples with in The Great Pretender, an engrossing history of the study of mental illness, centered around an experiment in which a psychiatrist and a group of other healthy people get themselves committed to mental hospitals in the early 1970s. There they experience the dehumanizing, traumatizing nature of the institutions themselves, and ultimately discover firsthand how mental illness diagnoses are biased and arbitrary at best.

How do we decide who is mentally ill? Drawing on years of archival research as well as her own personal experiences, Cahalan’s gripping account of the history of insanity is a feat of both enjoyable storytelling and skillful reporting.

Read more at: https://bookofthemonth.com/the-great-...
Profile Image for Jenna Bookish.
181 reviews140 followers
December 10, 2019
If you’re going into this book expecting an in-depth rehashing of the Rosenhan experiment and its conclusions, you may be disappointed. I hold a BA in psychology, so I was already somewhat familiar with this study going into the book. While I did get some new information from The Great Pretender, it was not nearly as much as I’d hoped. Part of the reason for this is that the focus of the book is not super specific. The synopsis from the publisher gave me an impression of a very different book than I read.

Another reviewer (who enjoyed the book a lot less than I did) made the comment that it felt like Cahalan did a lot of research on peripheral topics for this book and didn’t want it to go to waste. Consequently, it all gets included. While I get where this person is coming from, I disagree. A lot of the history of psychology included in this leads directly into David Rosenhan’s reasoning for conducting his famous experiment. He sent healthy “pseudo-patients” into mental hospitals for two major reasons: to expose the hazy nature of psychological diagnostic criteria as they existed at the time, and to provide witnesses who would be palatable to the general public who could relay the treatment the mentally ill were receiving in these institutions. The historical backdrop did not feel superfluous.

Cahalan also delves into several other famous experiments, again in more detail than I would have expected given the blurb’s focus on Rosenahn. These major experiments are also relevant, albeit in a tangential way, because of the controversy surrounding them. The Stanford Prison Experiment (Philip Zimbardo) and Stanley Milgram’s experiment on obedience to authority. These experiments also share some thematic similarities with Rosenhan’s work; all of them explore the darker side of human nature in varying respects. Zimbardo purported to show that the overwhelming majority of people are capable of horrifically abusive behaviors towards another person in dehumanizing, institutional settings like prisons. Milgram’s experiment had an authority figure in a lab coat asking participants to administer electric shocks to people as part of an experiment on the effects of punishment on learning. The “teaching experiment” was actually a smokescreen, and the true purpose was to see how many people would agree to shock someone who was in pain, and to what degree.

All three of these experiments (Rosenhan’s, Zimbardo’s, and Milgram’s) have faced sharp criticism of their methodology, with Zimbardo facing probably the most scrutiny. Issues vary from the potentially inappropriate level of manipulation on the participants from the researcher to outright deceit.

Cahalan’s book explores a variety of issues surrounding psychiatry in a good amount of detail, some only tangentially related to the experiment referenced in the title. If your interest in this book is primarily out of a desire to understand Rosenhan’s research, you may end up feeling like you are wading through a lot of unneeded information in order to get it. However, if you have a more general interest in psychology and psychiatry, this may be an excellent book for you.

You can read all of my reviews on my blog, Jenna Bookish!
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Profile Image for Woman Reading  (is away exploring).
470 reviews376 followers
October 18, 2020
2.5 Stars - rambling and poor organization mitigated the impact of her research findings
If sanity and insanity exist ... how shall we know them?
- David Rosenhan
These questions not only began Rosenhan's seminal study, they shaped the bulk of Cahalan's The Great Pretender. Rosenhan was a Stanford professor of psychology and law when he published "On Being Sane in Insane Places" (OBSIP) in 1973 in Science. He described how eight healthy adults presented themselves as having auditory hallucinations and were committed into eight different psychiatric hospitals across the US. The hospital intake psychiatrists diagnosed seven of these pseudo-patients with schizophrenia and one with manic depression. After an average stay of 19 days, these pseudo-patients were discharged with the diagnoses that their disorders were in remission and not cured. Rosenhan's conclusions that the field of psychiatry was unable to recognize sanity and the depersonalizing treatment from the hospitals inflicted severe blows on a medical discipline which has had a shaky reputation since its inception.

The author presented a loose history of the treatment of the mentally ill in order to illustrate how America has just about come full circle. For most of history, there's been a "unitary psychosis" designation - if you acted crazy, you were assumed to be crazy. In biblical times, the causes were believed to be either demonic possession or that a person "had been touched by God." In the 1800s in the US, a "crazy" person would typically be institutionalized until death at an insane asylum and though the cause was no longer attributed to demonic forces, the origin was still unknown. "Insanity" was broadly defined as the label could be thrown onto people who contravened societal norms - from suffragettes who wanted the vote to black slaves who repeatedly made escape attempts.

Cahalan focused on reform efforts in the late 1800s. In particular, she described journalist Nellie Bly's undercover work at the Women's Lunatic Asylum on New York's Blackwell Island in 1887. Blackwell Island was notorious for its filthy and overcrowded conditions. During Bly's 10 days inside, she saw a woman wearing a straight jacket as she gave birth and punishment in which the patient would be confined within a tomb-like crib. After Bly's article was published, there was an investigation, some of the worst practices were cleaned up, and the asylum's budget was increased by 60 percent.

The care and treatment of the mentally ill in America has not been something to boast about. Between 1907 and 1937, the eugenics philosophy was adopted by 32 states as they passed laws forcing the sterilization of the insane. This low point in US history inspired Nazi Germany to sterilize 300,000 psychiatric patients from 1934 to 1939 and to kill more than 200,000 mentally ill persons by 1945.

Cahalan described additional treatment trends, such as the rise of psychoanalysis in response to PTSD cases which were more prevalent than physical injuries among the returning WWII veterans. Monumental changes began in the early 1960s as federal policies created unintended consequences. President Kennedy wanted to move the mentally ill out of vast impersonal institutions and into much smaller home-like facilities. President Johnson created Medicare and Medicaid with restrictions on mental healthcare payments to continue JFK's policy. But since federal funding didn't materialize for these smaller care homes and states realized that the funding rules had changed, many states began shutting down their psychiatric hospitals without first creating alternative homes.

This was the climate in which Rosenhan's "OBSIP" was published. Public opinion of the psychiatric field diminished further and the closure rate of psychiatric hospital accelerated. This trend contributed to not only today's homelessness but to the high incarceration rate of people with diagnoses of mental health disorders.

The Great Pretender title originated with Cahalan's personal brush with insanity. She was afflicted with autoimmune encephalitis which produced symptoms exactly like those for schizophrenia. Her doctor diagnosed and treated her correctly before she would have been permanently committed to a psychiatric hospital. Her interest was piqued by Rosenhan's "OBSIP" case, especially since the pseudo-patients mimicked schizophrenia and the study had been widely influential. More than half of her book is Cahalan's research into Rosenhan and her mostly unsuccessful efforts to uncover the identities of all the pseudo-patients. It turns out that there's more than one "great pretender" in her book.

I like psychology and I found the history of mental healthcare interesting. I recognize what Cahalan accomplished with her investigation into Rosenhan. It wasn't a small issue that she unearthed. I agreed with her overall point that the state of mental health care is reprehensible and does not appear far advanced from Bly's days more than a century ago.

My low rating is due to the book's organization, or lack thereof, and the level of rambling was truly excessive in the last fifth of the book. It felt as though Cahalan was losing energy but still wanted to include as many of her research findings as possible. Also for a work of investigative journalism, Cahalan inserted herself into the narrative far too much and to the detriment of the book's impact.
Profile Image for Linda Smith.
53 reviews
December 5, 2019
I love non-fiction. I love psychology. I thought I was going to love this book. I was wrong.

I hate that I found this book so very disappointing. The author states the book is about Rosenhan and his pseudopatient study which I was excited to learn more about after it was mentioned briefly during my undergrad degree. Maybe 1 1/2 chapters is about Rosenhan’s experience in a psychiatric hospital along with a few experiences mentioned by the other pseudopatients. This book is mostly a history of psychiatry which is okay, but most definitely not what the author claimed it to be about.
The writing is also hard to follow. The author starts a paragraph on one topic and then follows several rabbit trails, going on rants and in depth discussion on another semi-related matter before finally finishing the original paragraph three page later.
Unfortunately, I really can’t recommend this book to anyone and I’m sad I wasted a Book of the Month credit on it.
Profile Image for Krystin | TheF*ckingTwist.
604 reviews1,886 followers
January 19, 2023
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This is a pretty dense read, full of medical jargon, medical history (seriously, you go through the creation of all the DSM volumes) and a complete dissection and recounting of Dr. Rosenhan’s study, On Being Sane in Insane Places. I admit I was kind of disappointed that Nellie Bly was only discussed for only a couple of paragraphs because that is the shit I showed up for. I was maybe expecting something a bit more sinister and historical. Like, give me some Geraldo Rivera at Willowbrook kind of drama.

But alas, it wasn’t meant to be.

The gist is this: David Rosenhan, a psychologist and Stanford University professor, was not all in on his profession and saw psychiatry as having taken a dangerous path. He believed people were over-diagnosed and over-medicated, and that the definitions of mental health issues were too broad and unreliable.

He conceived of his experiment as a way to test that reliability, checking himself into a mental ward undercover, claiming to hear voices and have other hallucinations. He wanted to see if the doctors, nurses and staff would be able to figure out he was lying. They couldn’t. He was instead diagnosed as schizophrenic and heavily medicated – like the drooling and not able to talk kind of medicated. After he was discharged, Rosenhan expanded the study, bringing on seven other “pseudo-patients” to go undercover, all at different psych hospitals and wards. Rosenhan came to the conclusion that psychiatrists and psychiatric hospitals were completely unable to sort the insane patients from the sane ones.

Once someone was deemed to be “insane,” all of their actions, even if perfectly normal behaviours, were seen as "crazy" because everything was being viewed through the lens of being “formally diagnosed.”



The study was published by the journal Science in 1973 and effectively caused the entire psychiatric field to reevaluate, take sides and come under scrutiny.

The story of David Rosenhan’s experiment was hella interesting and has a few shocking little twists. Basically, it all comes down to an Oprah-style moment of YOU GET SCHIZOPHRENIA! YOU GET SCHIZOPHRENIA! EVERYONE GETS SCHIZOPHRENIA!



But like I said, this book is dense with information, and it’s not only information about Rosenhan’s study and the author's complete investigation into every aspect of it, but any time a point is raised, the author takes a detour and pours out all her research into that detour topic. It’s very clear she completely immersed herself in everything having to do with psychiatry and its history... and that she didn’t want to edit out any of it. She found a spot for every last quote and topic, causing the narrative to sometimes feel it was jamming a square peg of information into a round hole where other information already was.

The Esalen Institute, JFK’s family history and his dedication to ending barbaric psychiatric practices like lobotomies; issues of replicability in research and using prisons as defacto psych wards for criminals who should really be in genuine psych wards – these are all topics that we meander onto at some point. It’s all worth the brainpower to read and I feel like I learned a lot even if I can’t say it totally stuck for recall.

My main takeaway from this is that we basically still know jack shit about mental health and how to treat it. It’s a sobering, scary and frustrating topic to delve so deeply into, but despite its scattered flow, the author did a hell of a job getting me to read something through to the end that I would normally have abandoned because I hate learning things or whatever.


⭐⭐⭐⭐ | 4 stars
Profile Image for Ashley.
3,507 reviews2,383 followers
January 21, 2020
When I read Brain on Fire, Susannah Cahalan's memoir about her experience with psychosis, I became a little obsessed with it. (The Netflix adaptation was disappointing, as the clever hook in the book was her investigating her own illness from an outside perspective, something she could do as she lost most of her memory from when she was sick. The film just follows it straight. But that's a digression.) Brain on Fire is an extremely readable memoir about a very scary and rare thing that happened to Cahalan. Especially since the extremely rare illness she was diagnosed with⁠—anti-NMDA receptor encephalitis, an autoimmune disease that at the time had only been diagnosed in a couple hundred people, ever⁠—is a kind of disorder that is sometimes called a "great pretender," meaning it mimics the symptoms of other diseases and is thus hard to diagnose. In this case, Cahalan's body was attacking her brain, but doctors believed she was mentally ill.

After recovering from her illness, Cahalan became obsessed with what could have been, or the people she began to call her "mirror images." One woman in particular was diagnosed with the same rare disorder after her doctor attended a lecture that Cahalan gave, but she had been suffering with the condition for years at that point, and even after treatment, would never be able to fully recover as Cahalan was able to, because she was incredibly lucky and diagnosed so early. Cahalan's is full of encounters like this now, as talking about mental illness with strangers has become a regular occurrence. When an acquaintance brought up David Rosenhan's infamous study from the 1970s, where he sent eight "pseudopatients" undercover into psychiatric hospitals to test out psychiatry's ability to tell the "sane" from the "insane," and to question the efficacy of psychiatric diagnosis, Cahalan immediately wanted to learn everything she could. Rosenhan's study became a phenomenon when it was published, crossing over into the mainstream media, and altering the practice of psychiatry in pretty significant ways.

Cahalan began digging into the story, determined to learn about Rosenhan, track the effects of the study, and maybe track down the pseudopatients themselves (they were given pseudonyms in the published paper, which was titled "On Being Sane in Insane Places"). But as she starts her digging, she gradually comes to realize there are enormous holes in the story, and Rosenhan and his study were not what they seemed. I don't want to say more than that, because it's fun to watch her chase down clues, and uncover what actually happened.

Cahalan also uses the investigation into the study to look into the history of psychiatry itself. This was one of the main things I'm ambivalent about with the book. At times it felt scattered, as other reviewers have pointed out, she follows a lot of "tangents." I keep going back and forth about whether those tangents were actually tangents at all, but instead purposeful insights into a greater picture that Cahalan was trying to present. But it was still a little messy and confused in execution; I think I would have appreciated more clarity. But I do think it was a necessity for her to not write about this study in a bubble. You need to know about a lot of it to understand the impact the study had on the field, and why it feels like such an urgent topic still today to Cahalan.

It was very unsettling throughout the book to realize just how much we still don't know about mental illness, as one psychiatrist she quotes in the book says, all we have are "signs and symptoms," and though other reviewers have accused Cahalan of an anti-psychiatry bias, I don't think that's what's going on here at all. She's certainly in favor of psychiatry practices that don't dehumanize patients, and in favor of science that advances our understanding of the brain and how it works. She's also not afraid to bring up sticky questions, like how the mental illness stigma (and cognitive bias) often leads to misdiagnosis, and how disorders that have a physical cause in the body are taken so much more seriously than the murkier conditions like bipolar or schizophrenia, or even clinical depression. She definitely is advocating for an approach that eliminates the distinction between a medical diagnosis and a mental one; she argues that mental diagnoses are medical, even if we don't yet understand the causes. (Her own case is pretty damning; she says the way she was treated was markedly different after she received her medical diagnosis, as compared to how she was treated when doctors thought she might have schizoaffective disorder, or maybe she was just "partying too much.")

One of the things I found fascinating about the book was that even as Rosenhan's study exposed flaws in the system, and produced massive change (a new standardized approach to diagnosis in the DSM-III for one thing), it also had massive consequences for the future of institutionalized psychiatry. There was already a growing anti-psychiatry movement in full swing by the time the study was published, one of the reasons it hit so big, and afterwards, many hospitals were closed, and those that are now left are massively underfunded. The need for psychiatric beds, according to Cahalan, is at minimum 95,000 heads in the USA. It is easier to get into Harvard in some cases than to get a bed and treatment when it is needed. Something I didn't know before this was that JFK's sister, Rosemary, had a developmental disorder due to oxygen deprivation at birth, and what ended up happening to her was so horrific, JFK decided to devote himself to the idea of ending barbaric practices on patients (like lobotomies) and to promote community care with government funding (a more holistic approach that focuses on humanizing patients). But because he was assassinated, the only part of his plan to be put into effect was the closing of hospitals, and the funding for different types of programs never materialized.

Despite it's scattered-ness, I'm really glad I read this, and I hope people who can make a difference in our mental health care system will also read it.

[3.5 stars, rounding up]
Profile Image for Rachel Quinn.
133 reviews30 followers
November 5, 2019
The Great Pretender by Susannah Cahalan
My Rating: 2/5 stars


Let me start by saying I typically tend to enjoy an non-fiction reads. I love learning and the plot of this book was so interesting to me. I mean it claims to be the real story of eight people who went undercover as psych patients into asylums in the 1970s. It sounds so exciting and enlighting. Well the most exciting part was the summary on the back cover.

The writing style of this book is awful. It’s like a drunk aunt or a wild college professor who was telling me a story and continually forgetting the point. It’s full of wild tangents and unnecessary author bias.

Don’t get me wrong Susannah Cahalan’s story where her actual illness was diagnosed as a mental disorder. But she wrote a Memoir called Brain on Fire: My Month of Madness. Did she really need to rehash that story in this book as well?

Parts of this book were really interesting but they got lost in the rest of the book. This book could have been shorter and better organized and I think this could have been a really powerful piece. The plot is really intriguing but it falls flat.


The Bottom Line: There are so many good books in the world, don’t waste your time with this one.

I received a review copy of this book from Grand Central Publishing and Shelf Awareness in exchange for an honest review. Thank you for allowing me to review this book.
Profile Image for britt_brooke.
1,646 reviews132 followers
December 11, 2019
Cahalan questions the validity of David Rosenhan’s undercover psychiatric study. I’m skeptical of this book’s purpose. It just seems like a platform to further shout her disdain for psychiatry. Perhaps this could’ve been a worthwhile article, but as a book, it lacks the sagacity of Brain on Fire.
Profile Image for Leah Rachel von Essen.
1,416 reviews179 followers
May 28, 2020
In The Great Pretender, Susannah Cahalan wishes to write about mental illness and the ways that the system of psychiatry is broken. Her starting point was her own experience, when a misdiagnosis of schizophrenia almost kept doctors from finding her rare brain condition.

This book had a lot of potential to describe the true failings of past and modern psychiatry through the lens of Rosenhan’s famous study where several healthy people had themselves committed to mental institutions to see how they would be perceived. Unfortunately, I had to stop about a quarter of the way through, because Cahalan’s antagonism to psychiatrists is so heavy as to be irresponsible. I know many of the studies she references, and I have done a lot of reading about anxiety, about the history of psychiatry and mental illness treatment, and about misdiagnosis (particular in women). So, particularly for the studies I was most familiar with, I can comfortably say that her conclusions are often speculative, she wildly simplifies many circumstances or studies, and she presents many generalizations as fact. Cahalan’s bias is understandable given her personal experience, but has no place in a text that presents itself as a nonfiction historical account and analysis.

Cahalan had an immense opportunity with this book to dig deep into the stigma against the mentally ill. She had a thesis hiding under the muck: the idea that once you are labeled as schizophrenic or manic depressive or mentally ill in some other way, it is nearly impossible to prove sanity given the bounds of current mental health understanding; the idea that once labeled, everything else you do is filtered through the lens of what is in your file, and the possibility of misdiagnosis is rarely considered. The treatment of people in hospitals, the relentless boredom of mental health facilities, and other such issues, are under-examined as well. It’s all lost under Cahalan’s speculation and bias that cast psychiatrists as villains.

Early in the book, Cahalan acknowledges that she was once critiqued for unfairly providing mental and physical illness as a dichotomy between unreal and real. And yet she continues to perpetuate the idea that psychiatrists are plotting and making it up as they go along, and that insanity and sanity are in a clear binary. For example, in telling her own story she says that her family fought against her being diagnosed with schizophrenia—they said that “I was acting crazy, sure, but I was not crazy.” She writes that, “It wasn’t me. Something had descended upon me in the same way that the flu or cancer or bad luck does.” (Italics are Cahalan's own in both cases.) This hit me hard as a prime example of the stigma against mental health that she later claims to be fighting against. My depression and anxiety aren’t me either, they are illnesses that I too cannot control. And she seems to ignore neurotransmitters completely—she mentions dopamine and other brain chemistry as new “terminology” without ever acknowledging that this is the physical basis for mental illness, dismissing a prime and necessary place for her to examine the link between mental and physical. At another point she writes: “When doctors diagnosed me with an organic illness (as in physical, in the body, real) as opposed to a psychiatric one (in the mind, and therefore somehow less real), it meant that I’d receive lifesaving treatment instead of being cordoned off from the rest of medicine.” (Again, italics are Cahalan's own.)

I have been misdiagnosed before. Several times, in fact, although this time in particular was terrifying. It wasn’t as deadly as in Cahalan's case, don’t get me wrong, and so I don't claim to grasp Cahalan’s pain. But last fall, I came down with lightheadedness, the feeling that I was short of breath, my heart pounding, and a fullness in my chest accompanied by sharp pains in my left ribs. When a doctor X-rayed my chest and found that my lungs were fine, his immediate next step was to tell me it was my anxiety. So I’ve been there. I have had a medical professional tell me that my illness was mental. I understand the pain and stress that comes from that, and the anger that follows—the anger knowing that a medical professional sent me home, advising me to stop taking my antidepressants and to not trust my psychiatrist without getting a second opinion from a primary care doctor. The anger knowing he did all that while I had pericarditis, which the cardiologist I would finally eventually see said was easily diagnosable, but which had gotten worse by the week, and if it had gone on unchecked, could have developed life-threatening complications.

I know that kind of anger, and I would be fascinated to read Cahalan’s memoir. But here, Cahalan has brought that anger into a troubling place. She is projecting her anger onto psychiatry, blaming it and its methods for its inability to diagnose definitively, something that is not limited to the world of mental illness. Some of her best writing in this book is around the stigma of being mentally ill, and yet she seems to lack the ability to turn that inward onto her own analysis and judgment of the field. She doesn’t interrogate why the mental health field is so behind other medical ones—the lack of funded research, the stigma itself, the prejudices against those commonly labeled insane (such as the disabled, women, people of color, queer people). In her analysis of the Rosenhan study she fails to consider that committing yourself into a hospital because you are hearing voices would inevitably lead doctors to trust your own reporting of hearing voices, and that a doctor releasing a person with the diagnosis of “schizophrenia in remission” makes a lot of sense when the patient says “I was hearing voices, I’m not any more,” and seems sane.

Overall, I’m deeply disappointed with this book and ultimately stopped reading it at page 140 because I did not want to feed my brain misinformation, and so felt I was getting frustrated without getting anything out of the text. Her bias against psychiatry and her bias, to be frank, against mental illness as something “unreal” were so pervasive that they inhibited my ability to enjoy the text. Once I realized how much that bias was also impacting the facts, this ceased to be a useful read.
Profile Image for Darya Silman.
450 reviews169 followers
August 17, 2021
There is sanity in every insane person, and there is insanity in every sane,” says the inaccurate quote from the book ‘The Great Pretender: The Undercover Mission that Changed Our Understanding of Madness.’ In her second book, Susannah Cahalan, who merely escaped being locked for a long, or perhaps, for a life-long, term in a psychiatric ward after a misdiagnosis, explores the possibilities of psychiatry. If a person can be misdiagnosed with modern cutting-edge technologies, what other faults may psychiatry contain? Does the flaw lie in the general approach or in the foundations of the field? In search of answers, the author digs into the groundbreaking research called ‘On Being Sane in Insane Places,’ published in the journal ‘Science’ in 1973 by Professor David Rosenhan. The professor and seven other people conducted an experiment, infiltrating into psychiatric wards under the premise of having hearing hallucinations. Their aim was to collect scientific data about conditions and care provided for mentally ill patients. According to the study, all infiltrations were successful, and the main concern for all participants was not to go insane in the debilitating environment. But were the results really accurate to the fact? Susannah Cahalan leads a reader through chapters containing her personal breakthroughs, dead ends, and doubts to find the truth that can shake modern psychiatry to the core.

The book deserves praise in many aspects. The author’s journalistic background ensures vivid descriptions, rich language, and accurately stressed paragraphs. Tactful curiosity and kindness, brought in by the author’s experience in a hospital, do not allow sensationalism to break into the narrative. All findings are backed up by a broad range of data and facts. The author uses archives, interviews with friends/family/colleagues, and David Rosenhan’s unpublished book to source the material.

The only minus, understandable and irrelevant compared to its massive-scale advantages, is the book’s focus on Cahalan's birth country, America. Though the author traces the origins of the field across different countries, she goes deeper into current psychiatry’s flaws and accomplishments on American soil in the last chapter. Her goal is to revolutionize the existing American healthcare system that unfairly divides and treats 'physical' and mental illnesses.


Profile Image for Robert Sheard.
Author 5 books315 followers
February 6, 2020
I'm having a difficult time deciding how I feel about this one. First of all, the promotional text on the front cover is somewhat misleading and doesn't give me warm fuzzies about the actual conclusions of the book. But without telling you why (spoilers), this book is all about undercutting what you know regarding the field of psychiatry. In some ways, I think it may have been a better long-form article than an entire book, and the digressions to flesh out the history were the parts where my interest faded somewhat. But if nothing else, the book sure reinforces the idea that psychiatry hasn't come out of the dark ages, for all its so-called scientific research.
Profile Image for Ashley Mullins.
26 reviews2 followers
November 18, 2019
While this was an interesting book, it is a dnf for me. The research is there and I understand the point of the book, however, it seems like a book written only to support her lack of belief in the mental health industry while ignoring all the beneficial and essential treatments available today.
Profile Image for Mariah Roze.
1,056 reviews1,056 followers
September 27, 2020
I loved Susannah Cahalan's first book: Brain on Fire, so I had to read her second book when it came out.

This book taught me so much about mental health, psychology and its developments and discoveries over the years and I learned A LOT about the lack of basis for diagnosing people.


"For centuries, doctors have struggled to define mental illness-how do you diagnose it, how do you treat it, how do you even know what it is? In search of an answer, in the 1970s a Stanford psychologist named David Rosenhan and seven other people -- sane, normal, well-adjusted members of society -- went undercover into asylums around America to test the legitimacy of psychiatry's labels. Forced to remain inside until they'd "proven" themselves sane, all eight emerged with alarming diagnoses and even more troubling stories of their treatment. Rosenhan's watershed study broke open the field of psychiatry, closing down institutions and changing mental health diagnosis forever.
But, as Cahalan's explosive new research shows, very little in this saga is exactly as it seems. What really happened behind those closed asylum doors, and what does it mean for our understanding of mental illness today?"
Profile Image for Chloe Smith.
19 reviews15 followers
December 12, 2019
While reading this book, I felt that the author after her (terribly distressing) experiences chronicled in Brain on Fire, developed a personal vendetta against psychiatry that colored her re-telling of the Rosenhan study.

She lambasted psychiatrists who have spent decades studying their discipline and cast doubts on the fact that psychiatry is directly related to the science of the brain (which it like.. totally is). Don't get me wrong, she also would mention very important topics that merit more discussion such as the prevalence of the mentally ill ending up either homeless or in prison, and the over-zealous prescribing of behavioral drugs, but all of these topics were really just tangents to her one larger point, which was to approach the Rosenhan experiment, a topic that would be at home in a textbook or a more serious academic work, with a journalistic sensationalism as she tried to follow up on Rosenhan's findings by tracking down study participants, and all but assassinated his character.

Additionally, the book lacked focus. She would describe a watershed psychological study in one paragraph and then spend pages describing the formative years of a minor character's wife, leaving me wondering where exactly she was going with all of this. After finishing the book, it is still unclear.
Profile Image for Nadine.
1,420 reviews240 followers
November 22, 2019
The Great Pretender is one of those nonfiction novels that is not for everyone. It’s information heavy and quite dry at times, but full of interesting and thought provoking ideas and concerns about the field of psychology and psychiatry.

The Great Pretender follows the author Cahalan as she dives deep into the 1973 ground breaking study about the treatment of patients at asylums. Cahalan sets out to discover the truth behind the study and interview its participants.

As mentioned previously, The Great Pretender is information heavy. Cahalan paints in detail the sentiments towards psychology and psychiatry at the time. This information is crucial to understanding the impact this study had on the doctors in the field and the public. However, Cahalan gets lost in the weeds at times by giving too much information or going off on tangents for pages that could have been shortened to a few paragraphs. This is especially true when she begins searching for the participants.

If you’re interested in the study and psychology/psychiatry in general, The Great Pretender is a fantastic book to read. Cahalan breaks down the tumultuous field making it easy to understand the culture of the time, the sentiment toward the field itself, and the future of medicine.
Profile Image for vanessa.
1,230 reviews148 followers
February 5, 2020
My main issue with this book is how disjointed it feels. It wants to be a narrative about David Rosenhan and his 1973 pseudo-patient experiment. However, it does not deliver a cohesive detailing or explanation of the study. Cahalan attempts to track down the people who took part in the experiment, she enumerates all of the valid criticisms of Rosehan's study, and she tells us random tidbits about the history of psychiatry.
The author often discusses a number of points, but then will meander to other psychiatry topics and histories. I didn't dislike these facts or stories, but they did not feel like they added to her main thesis. I left this book kind of like, "I listened for more than ten hours and I'm not sure I understood what this book was meant to be about - this one experiment, a history of psychiatry, Cahalan's own opinions about psychiatry?" I enjoyed Brain on Fire, but this one did not work as well for me.
Profile Image for Claire Taylor.
75 reviews5 followers
March 16, 2020
Full review on my blog: https://bookloverspizza.com/book-revi...

Wow, this was a really eye-opening look at the history of how we deal with people struggling with mental illness in this country. I read Cahalan's previous book, Brain on Fire, and really loved the description of her progression from how she wrote that book into this one. In short, she came to the realization that people (including doctors, nurses, etc) treated her differently once she was diagnosed with auto-immune disease vs. thinking she likely had developed a mental illness. Why? Isn't mental illness also a disease that needs to be treated? Why are people dealing with psychological issues singled out or treated differently? In this book, she investigates the ground-breaking study done in the 70s where one researcher sent "pseudo-patients" in to different asylums to test their system of diagnosis and treatment of mental illness. The findings of this study shocked the field and contributed greatly to what happened next which was pretty much a wide-spread closing of all mental asylums in this country. She delves deep into the psychiatry field and it gets pretty technical at times, but I still found it very fascinating. What she uncovers about the study was not at all what I expected and I appreciated how she laid out the facts fairly and concisely. I enjoyed this book and although I am not sure if others who liked her last book will appreciate this one (it is way more of a technical and investigative look at the psychiatry field and mental illness), I think Cahalan is a talented writer and I can't wait to see what she writes about next.
Profile Image for Morgan .
925 reviews246 followers
June 19, 2020
It would not be remiss to call this book an exposé.

A fascinating and in-depth exploration into David Rosenhan’s ground-breaking experiment published in 1973 "On Being Sane in Insane Places".

The experiment involved 7 (or 8?) pseudopatients (including Rosenhan himself) having themselves admitted into mental institutions under false pretenses. Rosenthan’s paper presented some damming results for the institutions and psychiatry in general.

The publication of this ‘experiment’ shook the psychiatric establishment to the core. It made Rosenhan a super star. So much so he was paid an advance on a further book which he never delivered. Why?

After 40+ years this lauded ‘experiment’ is called into question for its validity, and rightly so.

However, there is so much more to this book when it comes to the very in-exact science of psychiatry and mental health in general - how it is diagnosed, treated and perceived.

Cahalan’s research is deep, extensive and impeccable – the results are shocking and distressing.

There is much disturbing information in this book which the author has properly authenticated (see Notes at the end of the book) and I recommend it for anyone with even a passing interest in mental health.

Of course there are good doctors and bad doctors the unfortunate thing is that it seems to be nothing more than the luck of the draw which you happen to end up with.

While I remain skeptical about psychiatry in general Cahalan leaves us with this: “There is, some say, a lot to be encouraged about.” (Pg.286) – I hope she is right!


Profile Image for Sara Dahaabović.
280 reviews96 followers
May 5, 2020
I'm having a hard time deciding if this book deserves 4 or 5 stars. I have always loved Susannah's enthusiasm and writing style and I REALLY enjoyed this book, but then at some parts, I felt that she was jumping between ideas; she would start with the history of a professor or a psychologist and before getting into the point of why she brought them up she would go into several rabbit trails. If anything it reminded me with my conversations with my Ph.D. supervisor where 99% of the time we go into rabbit trails because of how excited we both are, but I think for this book and especially when you compare it with her previous one and one of my all-time favorites Brain on Fire it lacks some focus and hence loses one star of its rating.

A more detailed review to come!
Profile Image for Jessica J..
1,082 reviews2,507 followers
March 22, 2020
This would have been five stars if Cahalan had sunken her teeth into the meat of her story before the last 90-100 pages. The first half of the book gets bogged down by extensive histories of psychiatry as a science and as a practice, as well as the challenges of accurately diagnosing psychiatric conditions. This information is important, but I can imagine many readers growing bored before they get to the point where the story begins to grow truly interesting.

Trust me, once you get to chapter 19, the book becomes un-put-downable.
Profile Image for Joe Archer.
252 reviews20 followers
February 10, 2020
Brain on Fire was excellent, because it spoke to an individual experience and passionately called for greater awareness of a specific issue in psychiatric and neurologic medicine. In the Great Pretender, Cahalan abandons pointed direction in favor of generalizations and fear-mongering. There is a really interesting story buried deep within "The Great Pretender", about the history and truth behind "On Being Sane in Insane Places" but it's convoluted by a history of psychiatry that feels simultaneously superfluous and incomplete. However, my greatest problem with the book is that it's saturated by Cahalan's personal vendetta against the field of psychiatry (and medicine in general). Were her grievances thoughtfully reinforced with evidence I would not be so critical, but, as is the fashion of modern-day journalism, she chose to fill her work with snarky comments and baseless rhetoric instead of objective information.

It's great for Cahalan that her condition was discovered to have a known biochemical mechanism and treated accordingly, and yes, were she to be labelled with a psychiatric condition she would not have gotten the care she needed, but that's not an issue exclusive to psychiatry. We see examples everywhere in medicine - the African American patient with cystic fibrosis who is assumed to have sarcoidosis, the stroke patient labeled with MS, etc. Misdiagnosis has severe consequences, because your actual problem is growing while you're being treated for something else. That would have been a far better point to make than… what even was her objective? To call to attention the fact that psychiatry has few known biological mechanisms and there are many unknowns? Who doesn't know that? To call for further research into psychiatric pathology? It's one of the hottest fields in medicine right now. To give an objective and interesting account of the history of psychiatry and tell the story of a fascinating study that turned the field on its head? Then drop the juvenile personal commentary. To lash out aimlessly at an entire field of medicine and stir up as much panic as possible? Well done.

Furthermore, while I sift through Cahalan's rage, I can't help but question her central grievance with the handling of her case. "When you hear hoofbeats, think horses, not zebras" is the common medical saying. NMDA Receptor Encephalopathy, even today, is about as much of a zebra as you can find in medicine. If we test for every rare medical disorder immediately when provided common presenting symptoms, we are doing immense damage to the general population at large by driving up healthcare costs. This is part of the reason we are faced with the out-of-control medical bills we see today.

Her descriptions of psychiatrists feel like malicious caricatures. I find it very hard to believe that such callous and horrible remarks were the only things she ever heard in her interviews. This has not been the experience I have had with psychiatrists, who (above most other medical specialties) go out of there way to humanize their patients and treat mental illness equally to other ailments. I've worked with a lot of doctors, and the psychiatrists are the only ones who I've literally seen cry over a poor health outcome with one of their patients. I don't mean to say that Cahalan fabricated the callous comments she reports, but that she likely nitpicked the worst of the field to fuel her bonfire of fear and anger.

For every Susannah Cahalan that narrowly escapes a trip to the psychiatric hospital and has her condition cured, there are a million individuals with severe mental illness whose lives are improved by trained psychiatric professionals. It's insulting to those of us who have loved ones with severe mental illness and those of us who have worked in psychiatric facilities (I am in both camps) to suggest that the psych ward is a dark pit of hopelessness and malice from which there is no escape. And even more than insulting, it's dangerous to those who would really benefit from acute psychiatric treatment. I kept waiting for her to describe the modern psychiatric ward that she ominously references , but she never does. She leaves us in blind, ignorant fear.

Important Information that was (hopefully sloppily but likely strategically) left out:
-The majority of patients you will meet in a psychiatric hospital are admitted voluntarily
-Involuntary admission to a psychiatric hospital is (at least in my state) a law-enforcement issue, done by police officers and judges rather than psychiatrists
-The entire half of the psychiatric field that deals with addiction medicine, which has known biological mechanisms.

This is a bad book, for the points I've already made, but also because it just feels like a rambling blog-post rather than a thoughtful piece of journalism.
Profile Image for Cynthia.
1,198 reviews227 followers
November 30, 2019
The Great Pretender is an in-depth exploration of a 1970s study that involved pseudo patients being admitted to mental institutions and the results of their findings, led by a Stanford psychologist named David Rosenhan. The book looks at the details of this study, its effect on the future of mental health, the history of psychology and psychiatry, and the holes in what Rosenhan revealed to the world.

“Psychiatry at its best is what all medicine needs more of - humanity, art, listening, and empathy - but at its worst it is driven by fear, judgment, and hubris.” ~Susannah Cahalan

This is not a biography. If you go into it expecting a story, you may be disappointed. It is an investigative journalism report and its findings are revealed to us in the same order that they were revealed to the writer. Her passion for the topic is overwhelmingly evident and adds flavor to the text. Still, this collaboration of facts and the fact finding process may not appeal to everyone. With the right expectations in mind, I feel that readers can really benefit from the intriguing material presented in The Great Pretender.

Upon finishing the book, I felt that I had more questions than I had before starting it, which is not a flaw, as I feel the writer intended to create inquisitiveness for the readers. I believe she sought to make us question the system and the answers we’re handed. If we are unwilling to investigate and we accept all that the psychiatric field (or society, in general) hands us as fact, perhaps a book like this will open up our eyes to why we need to be more critical seekers and thinkers. The topic explored is complex and important.

I really enjoyed The Great Pretender. The material was fascinating and I am a fan of this type of factual delivery in non-fiction. Personal anecdotes were limited but noted when Cahalan felt they supported the report she shared with the reader. I appreciated traveling through the mystery of it all as she unraveled it. Having felt similarly about Brain on Fire, I must enthusiastically state that I’m really looking forward to whatever Susannah Cahalan produces next!

Thank you Grand Central Publishing for gifting me this finished copy in exchange for an honest review. All opinions are my own.
Profile Image for Tess Taylor.
192 reviews16 followers
April 11, 2020
2- This really kills me, because as a psychology grad student and a big fan of Cahalan's Brain on Fire, I was really hoping to love The Great Pretender. Unfortunately, the main idea that this book occupies itself with never comes to fruition, which makes it feel unsatisfying and half baked. Reading this book felt like Cahalan was trying to put a puzzle together with pieces from 5 different puzzles. The Great Pretender probably would have been better as a more condensed piece of writing, like a Vanity Fair article. As a full-fledged book, it's not able to pack a punch.
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