Summary:
The Edge of Every Day is the memoir of a woman who
comes from a “multiplex” family, in which schizophrenia is manifested in successive
generations.
The book consists of a series of essays. Some, on topics ranging from gymnastics to building
altars, were first published independently and do not appear (at least at first
glance) to be linked. The choppy effect this produces speaks to the disorganized
thinking that psychotic persons experience.
Other essays propel the tragic narrative of family members slipping into
psychosis. At the age of ten, the author Marin Sardy, watches as the “shapeless
thief” of schizophrenia steals her mother’s personality away. Later, as she reaches her thirties, she witnesses
her younger brother succumb to an even more pernicious illness.
Despite Sardy’s mother’s conspicuous symptoms, (she advises
her daughter to move to Pluto and informs her that her father has been swept
away in a tsunami and replaced by another man), she functions just well enough
to avoid being compelled to accept treatment. Thus, no one can stop her from
going through a large inheritance and becoming destitute.
Sardy’s brother Tom suffers his first psychotic break in his
20’s and then rapidly deteriorates. He
repeatedly “cheeks” his meds and falls through the cracks of Anchorage’s mental
health system. The author and her family scour the streets, hoping to lure him inside
for a shower or hot meal. As the weather worsens, they can only hope he will land
in prison if it means not being exposed to the Alaskan elements. Ultimately, the young man, who once sailed through
college with A’s, commits suicide in the bathroom of a psychiatric facility.
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