This was better than I expected! I went fairly nuts when I was in London for a long weekend in February, and just picked this up while I was at the Imperial War Museum (bless my dear friend Laura for taking me there, given that she works there and it was a Sunday). I was just tickled that the modern IWM is on the site of the former Bethlem (as Mr. Chambers refers to it) Hospital, at least in its 1815 to WWI location.
The book is really a history of Bedlam itself -- the founding, the physical building, the people who worked there, and a smattering of the stories of patients. Mr. Chambers somewhat jarringly but not disrespectfully refers to the inhabitants of Bethlem as "lunatics", but it's clear that he's more sticking with the times than trying to be rude. The book is really more of a teaser for a greater discussion of public perceptions of mental health in the 18th and 19th century, which itself is utterly fascinating. I don't fault the book for being more about the actual physical hospital and its administration -- that was actually really interesting (why were the Governors so hellbent on being "independent", one must ask), but it certainly whetted my appetite to read more about historical views on mental health and community responsibility to manage it, along with the types of disorders or maladies were viewed as ones necessitating temporary or permanent mental healthcare facility stays. Furthermore, I thought -- probably rather stupidly -- about how the use of various pharmacological treatments is, effectively, replacing the chains and straitjackets in managing certain behaviors that can result in aggressive or dangerous behavior. I, of course, think that is probably the more humane course to use sedatives, but it's still just a tragic flaw in human brain chemistry that there are individuals who are in need of some type of restraint, be it physical or chemical, in order to avoid causing harm.
Anyway, not the most thrilling book, but certainly interesting!