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Diana Dirkby
Author
The Overlife, A Tale Of Schizophrenia
Diana Dirkby, author

Adult; General Fiction (including literary and historical); (Market)

The novel is the story of a mother and daughter living with paranoid schizophrenia. It studies the effect of this brain disorder on the lives of the protagonists and their families. The novel, though fiction, is based on the authentic experiences of the author, who lives with paranoid schizophrenia, as did her mother.
Reviews
This emotional and illuminating story, the debut from Dirkby, probes life with mental illness over two generations, as narrator Sarah—who, like the author, lives with paranoid schizophrenia—reflects on her childhood with a mother who herself has paranoid schizophrenia, and an abusive, uncaring father who continually moves the family around Australia. With time jumps from the past to the present, Sarah examines the trauma that comes from having or loving someone with a mental illness, especially in cases where those involved don’t understand or realize what they’re enduring. As Sarah learns more about her mother and her mental illness, throughout her fraught adolescence and into maturity, she eventually arrives at a better understanding of her mother, herself, and ways to cope with and manage her own paranoid schizophrenia.

With hard-won insight, Dirkby weaves together a resonant story of mental health, family, and learning to accept oneself and that which cannot be controlled. Through both the uncertain gaze of Sarah’s childhood and the clarifying reflections of later life, as Sarah deals with romance and making a living, Dirkby immerses readers in her mind and life. Constantly being misdiagnosed as having post traumatic stress disorder from her childhood experiences, the adult Sarah often finds herself facing her mind alone, depressed and afraid. Dirkby's characters feel true, as do their experiences, which resonate with telling detail, not just about schizophrenia and anosognosia—the condition of being unaware of one’s psychiatric condition—but the worlds of music and dance.

"The stigma that a mentally ill person is entirely to blame for anything going wrong in their life and that they are dangerous to know is ubiquitous but rarely accurate," Sarah states. The Overlife is a touching story that, with vivid detail and welcome frankness, shreds such misapprehensions throughout its often heartbreaking story of family, unconditional love, forgiveness, and unquiet minds. During its many bleak or tense moments, the book’s very existence offers a feeling of hope.

Takeaway: Revealing novel steeping readers in the experience of mental illness.

Comparable Titles: Arnhild Lauveng’s A Road Back from Schizophrenia, Han Nolan’s Crazy.

Production grades
Cover: A-
Design and typography: A
Illustrations: N/A
Editing: A
Marketing copy: A

New York Weekly

“Even when life feels like a discordant melody, there is always the possibility of finding harmony within the cacophony of existence.”

In a world often shrouded in stigma and misunderstanding, “The Overlife: A Tale of Schizophrenia by Diana Dirkby emerges as a symphony of human experience, a haunting melody that lingers long after the final note. This profound exploration of a life touched by paranoid schizophrenia invites readers to step into the fractured yet profoundly resilient world of Sarah and her mother, Jodie. Through their tumultuous journey, this book unveils the transformative power of love, hope, and the unbreakable human spirit.

Diana Dirkby, an Australian-born research mathematician, is uniquely positioned to unravel the complex tapestry of schizophrenia, a condition she herself grapples with, just as her mother did before her. However, Dirkby does not view schizophrenia as the death knell of one’s aspirations but rather as the inception of an “overlife” – a new, meaningful existence filled with hope, strength, and the unexpected beauty that can arise from adversity.

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