

"Hystera is a haunting, mesmerizing story of madness, longing and identity, set against one of the most fascinating times in NYC history.

It also pungently evokes the gritty New York of the ’70s.”Ĭaroline Leavitt, New York Times bestselling author of “Pictures of You” “Leora Skolkin-Smith’s new novel, “Hystera,” provides a very vivid sense of being in the head of someone having a psychotic breakdown, and is a powerfully useful reference book for dealing with the mental-health system. Robert Whitcomb, reviewer “The Providence Journal” This book is a tragically beautiful reminder of how fragile mental health really is.” As Lilly journeys (sometimes very unwillingly) back to a healthy state, she alternates between fear of herself, fear of her body that strangely border on paranoid regarding others' intention towards her and a stubborn belief that she deserves punishment for a tragic occurrence many years prior. Lilly parents are both alive and the mother figures very heavily in her illness though it is only hinted at until Lilly is unable to avoid her at random meetings. What follows there is a collage of sights, feelings and sounds as Lilly attempts to both fit in with the patient yet keep some part of herself essentially separate. One night she swallows too many pills mixed with alcohol and then checks herself into the psychiatric ward at the state hospital. Lilly is a student in the 1970's at Sarah Lawrence College who experiences her life slip away from her in short mental breaks. Skolkin-Smith puts this to rest in HYSTERA. “Someone once said that literature is either weighty and wise or interesting and captivating.

How do we know who we really are? How do we find our true selves under the heavy burden of family and our pasts? In an unpredictable portrait of mental illness Hystera penetrates to the pulsing heart of the questions.įrom RAGMAG, An International Magazine of Culture, Art, Entertainment, Reviewer, Amal Chaaban

She is a foreigner there until her fellow patients release her from her isolation with the power of human intimacy. Unreachable behind her thick wall of fears, the world of hospital corridors and strangers become a vessel of faith. She retreats from the outside world into a world of delusion and the private terrors of a New York City Psychiatric Hospital. Tripping through failed love affairs with men, and doomed friendships, all Lilly wants is to be sheltered from reality. After a fatal accident takes her father away, Lillian Weill blames herself for the family tragedy. Set in the turbulent 1970s when Patty Hearst became Tanya the Revolutionary, Leora Skolkin-Smith's Hystera is a timeless story of madness, yearning, and identity. The story of a young woman in a mental hospital in 1974
