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Annie's Ghosts: A Journey Into a Family Secret

Annie's Ghosts: A Journey Into a Family SecretAuthor: Steve Luxenberg
Publisher: Hyperion
Category: Book

List Price: $24.99
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Seller: ebooksweb*
Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 81 reviews
Sales Rank: 232005

Media: Hardcover
Edition: First Edition
Pages: 416
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.5
Dimensions (in): 9.3 x 6.4 x 1.4

ISBN: 1401322476
Dewey Decimal Number: 306.875408740977434
EAN: 9781401322472
ASIN: 1401322476

Publication Date: May 5, 2009
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days



Features:
  • ISBN13: 9781401322472
  • Condition: NEW
  • Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.

Also Available In:

  • Paperback - Annie's Ghosts: A Journey Into a Family Secret
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Product Description

Beth Luxenberg was an only child. Everyone knew it: her grown children, her friends, even people she'd only recently met. So when her secret emerged, her son Steve Luxenberg was bewildered. He was certain that his mother had no siblings, just as he knew that her name was Beth, and that she had raised her children, above all, to tell the truth.

By then, Beth was nearly eighty, and in fragile health. While seeing a new doctor, she had casually mentioned a disabled sister, sent away at age two. For what reason? Was she physically disabled? Mentally ill? The questions were dizzying, the answers out of reach. Beth had said she knew nothing of her sister's fate.

Six months after Beth's death in 1999, the secret surfaced once more. This time, it had a name: Annie.

Steve Luxenberg began digging. As he dug, he uncovered more and more. His mother's name wasn't Beth. His aunt hadn't been two when she'd been hospitalized. She'd been twenty-one; his mother had been twenty-three. The sisters had grown up together. Annie had spent the rest of her life in a mental institution, while Beth had set out to hide her sister's existence. Why?

Employing his skills as a journalist while struggling to maintain his empathy as a son, Luxenberg pieces together the story of his mother's motivations, his aunt's unknown life, and the times in which they lived. His search takes him to imperial Russia and Depression-era Detroit, through the Holocaust in Ukraine and the Philippine war zone, and back to the hospitals where Annie and many others were lost to memory.

Combining the power of reportage with the intrigue of mystery, Annie's Ghosts explores the nature of self-deception and self-preservation. The result is equal parts memoir, social history, and riveting detective story.

Reviews
"The author calls on his investigative reporting skills not just to uncover the facts, but to explore what happens when lies or omissions become truth, exposing the contradictions, contrasts and parallels that exist within every life, every relationship and every family. Beautifully complex, raw and revealing."
--Kirkus Reviews, STARRED REVIEW

"Part memoir, part mystery, part history of the mental-health movement, Annie's Ghosts is a fascinating account of a life lived in the shadows."
--Booklist, STARRED REVIEW

"Luxenberg's beautiful book is in part the story of secrecy itself, when words carried mysterious power and wounds could not be healed through forgiveness."
--Melissa Fay Greene, author of Praying for Sheetrock and There Is No Me Without You

"It is too simple to call this a magnificent detective story. More than that, Annie's Ghosts is an honest and faithful rumination on a sad, delicate mystery . . . a remarkable journey to the very center of a secret."
--David Simon, creator of HBO's The Wire

"Steve Luxenberg's hunt for the story of his hidden aunt is both a gripping detective story and a haunting memoir. It will leave you breathless. The personal tale is astonishing, and Luxenberg uses it to explore, in a deft and poignant way, the nature of secrets, memories, historical truth, and family love."
--Walter Isaacson, author of Einstein and Benjamin Franklin

"Steve Luxenberg sleuths his family's hidden history with the skills of an investigative reporter, the instincts of a mystery writer, and the sympathy of a loving son. His rediscovery of one lost woman illuminates the shocking fate of thousands of Americans who disappeared just a generation ago."
--Tony Horwitz, author of A Voyage Long and Strange and Confederates in the Attic

"Annie's Ghosts is perhaps the most honest, and one of the most remarkable books I have ever read. It is an exploration into a family's past, a relentless hunt that unearths buried secrets with multiple layers and the uncertain motives of their keepers, and one son's attempt to fully understand the details and meaning of what has been hidden . . . From mental institutions to the Holocaust, from mothers and fathers to children and childhood, with its mysteries, sadness and joy--this book is one emotional ride."
--Bob Woodward, author of The War Within and State of Denial

"I started reading within minutes of picking up this book, and was instantly mesmerized. It's a riveting detective story, a moving family saga, an enlightening if heartbreaking chapter in the history of America's treatment of people born with what we now call special needs."
--Deborah Tannen, author of You Just Don't Understand and You're Wearing That?

"This is a memoir that pushes the journalistic envelope . . . Luxenberg has written a fascinating personal story as well as a report on our communal response to the mentally ill."
--Helen Epstein, author of Where She Came From and Children of the Holocaust

"This is a book about secrets: family secrets, secrets as wounds, secrets that begin as tactics and end as shackles. Like an archaeologist obsessed, Steve Luxenberg digs to unearth the long-buried truth about his mother's hidden sister . . . we learn about lost worlds and a lost time, we learn about ourselves, and we learn about the universally wounding, shackling, echoing life of secrets."
--Walter Reich, MD, former Director of the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum; Yitzhak Rabin Memorial Professor of International Affairs, Ethics, and Human Behavior, and Professor of Psychiatry at George Washington University


Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 81
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5 out of 5 stars An engrossing, at times heartbreaking, portrayal of family secrets and past attitudes towards mental health   January 4, 2010
Kay Elizabeth
Annie's Ghosts: A Journey Into a Family Secret by Steve Luxenberg is not your everyday family memoir. This poignant, memorable book will live in your thoughts long after it's been returned to your book shelf. Annie's Ghosts is a striking combination of family secrets, mental health issues in the forties and the entanglements of love, past and present.

The most astounding thing about Annie's Ghosts? It's true. The book begins after Steve's mother's death with a revelation of an aunt that neither Steve nor his siblings have ever heard of. In fact, his mother Beth had always taken great pains to tell newcomers to her immediate circle that she was an only child. Everyone who knew Beth knew she was, including her children. The reality was that Beth wasn't.

The story unfolds Steve's investigation into who this mystery aunt was and why his mother never had spoken of her all his life. He discovers that once, very close to the end of her life, Beth did talk about a disabled sister who was sent away at two years old. Beth mentioned it briefly, telling the doctor that was all she knew. It wasn't.

Curiouser and curiouser.

Steve finds out she wasn't two. She was almost twenty one and her name was Annie. The girls had grown up side by side, only two years apart in age. And his mother's name wasn't Beth. The more he probes, the more hidden knowledge is unveiled about his family's background and the events surrounding Annie's thirty one years of institutionalization.

Annie's Ghosts is not a stab in the dark based on flights of the imagination. It is not comprised of hearsay and conjecture where every word spoken by any relative with the vaguest recall of Annie's existence is treated as gospel truth. The author's career choice of investigative journalism removed that possibility.

Author Steve Luxenberg has been a senior editor at The Washington Post for twenty two years. He's been the guiding hand for teams that have won award after award, two of which were Pulitzer prizes for explanatory journalism. The investigation that is the essence of Annie's Ghosts is methodical and thoughtful, with pieces of the puzzle gathered from places as diverse as Ukraine at the height of the Holocaust, Russia, Depression-riddled Detroit and the Philippine war zone.

How his mother managed to keep her secret for decades until she passed at almost eighty is incredible. Combining compassion and integrity that keeps it real, Steve Luxenberg's thoughtful analysis of the information at hand shows a man who's occasionally torn between the dual responsibilities of being a journalist and a son. His dogged determination to follow through on every lead, no matter how small, his moments of doubt as to how reliable what he hears really is and whether he should let sleeping dogs lie made me want to will him on and encourage him not to give up.

Steve takes nothing at face value and checks, crosschecks and rechecks the facts before assimilating the information to the best of his ability. More than once he runs into red tape and bureaucratic bungling - incomplete files, for example. That only delays his search but doesn't deter it. His unswerving dedication to the pursuit of the truth is what makes Annie's Ghosts such a compelling read. This book is far beyond what Steve mentions in his end notes as his vision for it - "part history, part journalism and part memoir." To my mind, he forgot to say "and all heart."

When I finished this book, my thoughts revolved around Steve, Annie and Beth and what could have been. Who knows what Annie could have taught him or how different life would have been if she hadn't needed to be a secret, institutionalized for almost all of her life. As we follow Annie's path it's hard to not get a lump in your throat for the girl whose life could have been worlds apart from the one she lived had she been born even a few decades later. My heart goes out to them all.

Beth was by all accounts a wonderful mother and carried that burden for decades. How different would it have been had she felt able to freely discuss her sister? I would not judge Beth too harshly and I don't think any reader will. Attitudes towards mental health were far removed from what we see today. Beth hid her sister's existence after institutionalization for whatever reasons of her own. Her death means there will never be an answer from Beth's lips as to the question of why. She simply did what she thought was best, as we all do in difficult times. Steve's personal account is the closest we will ever come to understanding.

Annie's Ghosts is a moving story of love, responsibility, changing times, detection, frustration and eventual resolution of sorts. The emotional bonds of family memories formed long ago are never truly broken. They can merely be concealed, never severed. Annie's Ghosts reminds us of how one decision taken in life can resonate forever.

Every family has secrets. It's what we do with them that counts. Steve Luxenberg chose to share his with an open heart and inquiring mind. I'm grateful he did. Sumptuous in its details and heartrending in places, Annie's Ghosts is a gift of understanding, not only of the mental health systems of yesteryear and how far we have come, but that frailties of human nature are timeless and enduring.

I have a feeling that Annie would be smiling down on him for telling the world what she always knew: she mattered.

A fabulous, riveting book. Thank you Steve for sharing your family with us.


Kay Elizabeth
Editor/Owner,
The Cuckleburr Times



2 out of 5 stars Not a whodunit but a whydunit   December 28, 2009
Michael Langmaid
0 out of 1 found this review helpful

This was a disappointing book for me.

I had heard a NPR interview with the author, Steve Luxenberg, when the book first appeared and went right out to buy a copy. A friend who works with the adult mentally ill and developmentally disabled around this same time told me she wanted to read the book so I passed it along to her before reading it.

Why did Luxenberg's mother create this fiction about her life? It's hard to know because the author can only provide conjecture and opinion, his own and those of people who knew his mother or who had experience working with the mentally ill (MI) or developmentally disabled (DD). Clearly the mother suffers by comparison with a Holocaust survivor, Anna Oliwek, who states the undeniable fact that families don't abandon their own. No matter how many explanations or possibilities that Luxenberg attempts to surface, the fact is that his mother acted cowardly and selfishly in denying her sister Annie's existence and doing nothing for her from the time that Annie was institutionalized until her death.

I liked the concept of the book and Luxenberg gave some interesting details along the way, but the book suffers from a rambling, picaresque narrative suffused with a whole lot of gratuitous details and side excursions.

What is most frightening about this story is the way that a whole community of neighbors and relatives entered into a conspiracy of passivity about the existence of Annie, so that in the end she was abandoned by both family and community and became permanently entrapped by a large bureaucratic mental health system that was too often understaffed and underfunded.

The way that a society regards and treats its prisoners, its elderly, and its mentally ill and developmentally disabled reveals the measure of its morality and integrity. By these same criteria how does Beth Luxenberg measure up?




5 out of 5 stars Great!!   December 22, 2009
wild animals
This book is excellent! It is a detective story, a family history, a drama, and a memoir. It is also an expose of the treatment of mentally ill and disabled people during much of the 20th century. I couldn't put it down.

I have recommended this book to family, and it got us talking about family secrets, who we are, how we know each other, and whether or not we should let secrets die with their keepers.



4 out of 5 stars Fascinating story!   December 7, 2009
S. Grigg
As some other reviews have suggested, there is a lot of detail to this book, but the detail is necessary to tell the story with any clarity and the reader does need to be paying attention. It is a fascinating story and worth the read in trying to figure out what makes people tick, and in trying to understand why they do what they do. One of the big pluses of this book is that it is very well written which makes it much easier to follow such a complex story. I am always interested in reading about treatment of the mentally ill, which has drastically changed for the better in the past few decades. Along with gleaning information about treatment of the mentally ill is also a very human story. Beyond that...I NEVER put spoilers in any review that I post! If you like to read memoirs, and you are interested in the subject matter this is a great book.


5 out of 5 stars One of the Better Books I've Reviewed Recently   November 29, 2009
R. Kirkham (Rushville, Illinois USA)

This bewildering memoir is written honestly and determinedly to explore the tragedy of those institutionalized in the early days of mental illness. It explores how families were able to put family members away, simply pretending they never existed. This honest memoir is a must read for anyone knowing someone with a mental illness.


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