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Dad hopes book on schizophrenia wounds you Book review (Nonfiction): 'No One Cares About Crazy People'

Richmond Times-Dispatch - 4/26/2017

NONFICTION

Ron Powers

342 pages, Hachette, $28

"And really, end of the day, who the hell wants to read about schizophrenia anyway? Not me."

That's Ron Powers, speaking of himself while echoing the remark by onetime Scott Walker aide Kelly Rindfleisch that became the title of Powers' latest book: "No one cares about crazy people."

Powers actually cares a great deal, for reasons spelled out on his first page. Kevin, the younger of his two children, hanged himself in 2005, just before turning 21. His brother, Dean, two years and eight months older, experienced a psychotic break on Christmas Day 2012; the following summer, he tried to drown himself. Schizophrenia drove both boys to the brink.

In his moving "Preface," Powers provides all the right reasons he avoided writing this book for 10 years after Kevin's suicide. Protecting his family's privacy. The moral blemish of exploitation, coupled with his insistence that his sons are not for sale. Fear that nobody would want to read it.

With the blessing of his surviving son and his wife, Honoree, he decided to tell his family's story, supplemented by a history of how mental illness has been treated, from Bedlam to Obama.

Those historical portions of the book don't break new ground; as good a writer as Powers is, they could be much shorter.

But through judicially interspersed chapters involving his beloved boys, one is brought back to why Powers is so passionate - living as he does in a country where, as he points out, 90 percent of the 38,000 suicides each year are the result of mental illness. Where mental illness shortens life expectancy by 23 years. Where more than half the prison population is mentally ill.

The chapters on Kevin and Dean are heartbreaking. Powers takes us back to their early, carefree days as kids. He shares writings from both, alongside anecdotes of the sort that might be told by any proud parent.

Cursed by hindsight, he can describe an accident during which Dean was wrongly accused of drunken driving as the event "that launched my eldest son into his rendezvous with schizophrenia." Listening to the musically gifted Kevin play a new song on his guitar, Powers recalls a "temporary, beautiful, golden thing ... a presence to be experienced only once, and briefly, and then never again."

"How utterly unprepared we were," Powers writes of himself and Honoree, "for grasping the overwhelming obligations that lay before us; how eager - how understandably humanly eager - to accept and cling to the least dreadful of the possibilities."

What Powers describes is the sort of anxiety and accompanying helplessness all loving parents feel, in watching their children navigate the treacherous shoals of adolescence. Powers candidly acknowledges that his sons' drug and alcohol abuse didn't help; he presents the science suggesting that this likely accelerated their genetic predisposition toward schizophrenia.

Receiving excellent medical care, Dean eventually pulls out of his tailspin; that said, this is no book for softies. "I hope you do not 'enjoy' this book," Powers writes in his "Preface." "I hope you are wounded by it; wounded as I have been in writing it. Wounded to act, to intervene."