The I Index

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53

/100

I Index Overall Rating

Readers

54/100

Critics

53/100

Scholars

N/A

Author:

Alice Hattrick

Publisher:

The Feminist Press at CUNY

Date:

May 10, 2022

In 1995 Alice's mother collapsed with pneumonia. She never fully recovered and was eventually diagnosed with ME, or Chronic Fatigue Syndrome. Then Alice got ill. Their symptoms mirrored their mother's and appeared to have no physical cause; they received the same diagnosis a few years later. Ill Feelings blends memoir, medical history, biography and literary nonfiction to uncover both of their case histories, and branches out into the records of ill health that women have written about in diaries and letters. Their cast of characters includes Virginia Woolf and Alice James, the poets Elizabeth Barrett Browning and Emily Dickinson, John Ruskin's lost love Rose la Touche, the artist Louise Bourgeois and the nurse Florence Nightingale. Suffused with a generative, transcendent rage, Alice Hattrick's genre-bending debut is a moving and defiant exploration of life with a medically unexplained illness

What The Reviewers Say

Jonathan Taylor,
Times Literary Supplement (UK)
The kind of language used to describe and diagnose illness is very important, and Hattrick’s book might be seen as a kind of virtuosic riff on the ideas Susan Sontag expressed in (1978). Like Sontag, Hattrick accepts the inevitability of metaphoric thinking; but they also set out to resist the dominant metaphors used by medical professionals.
June Sawyers,
Booklist
Hattrick’s descriptions of their and their mother’s symptoms are visceral, even painful to read. Sickness, they note, changes the patient’s notion of time. Part memoir, part medical history, part diary, Ill Feelings is an unsentimental, angry, and ultimately brave account of living with relentless suffering..
Kathleen Gerard,
Shelf Awareness
Alice Hattrick bears fascinating witness to the arduous burden of sickness and chronic infirmity. It is a deeply personal, thoroughly researched, philosophical memoir.