The I Index

Charles Arrowsmith,
The Washington Post
Deeply researched.
David Yezzi,
The Wall Street Journal
[A] brisk, rewarding account of the innovative doctors and their "neurasthenic" patients who suffered unprecedented psychological distress (and in unprecedented numbers) on the Western Front..
Robert S. Davis,
New York Journal of Books
Glass writes a simple, honest, straightforward engrossing history of the epic scale of post-traumatic stress disorder during the First World War as studied in Craiglockhart Hospital near Edinburgh. The narrative includes many individual case studies that make the war real..
Mark Athitakis,
On the Seawall
Glass... delivers a clear picture of how poetry of the war... shifted not just from jingoistic to critical, but also sought out new metaphors for the agonies of the trenches, concerned as much with soldiers’ psyches as their bravery.
Peggy Kurkowski,
Shelf Awareness
Glass captures the distinctive environment of Craiglockhart and its dynamic treatment for shattered psyches, though he is careful to point out that many "cured" officers would suffer trauma for the rest of their lives. Heartrending and inspirational, Soldiers Don't Go Mad is a moving elegy on the power of art to express the inexpressible..

Kirkus
Within an engrossing novelistic structure, Glass... expertly weaves the stories of these men into a history of Craiglockhart and advancing insights into the causes and treatments for shell shock.

Publishers Weekly
Thoroughly researched and lucidly written, this is an immersive look at the healing power of art and a forceful indictment of the inhumanity of war..