An Editors' Pick from the New York Times, AV Club, Vol. 1 Brooklyn, and Literary North. A portrayal of mental illness like none other. More claustrophobic than
Girl, Interrupted and more frightening than
The Bell Jar, Howland's memoir maps the world of a 1960s psychiatric ward with an unflinching eye.
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Esmé Weijun Wang One of the significant writers of her generation.
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Saul Bellow Looking to read a memoir? W-3 by Bette Howland is well worth the price of admission.... Not for the faint of heart, this is a beautiful book about writing your way out of real darkness. It's brilliant. And after you read it, you won't be able to stop yourself from devouring her strange and wonderful short story collection,
Calm Sea and Prosperous Voyage.
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192 Books A story about her neighbor's heart, not her own–an anthology of the lives she encounters in the ward known as W-3. [Howland tells] the story of a collective with blunt clarity, and sidestepping the genre's potential for sentimentality or sensationalism. She brings the particularities of the world to life.
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Parul Sehgal, the New York Times The power and poignancy of
W-3 lies in its contradictions. It offers us a portal to a particular time and place, yet the compassion and truthfulness that underlies the writing renders it timeless, as urgent a read now as when it was first written nearly half a century ago.
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Lucy Scholes, the Paris Review "Dazzlingly and daringly written."
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The Guardian "A Writer of terrifying power, who sees and hears everything...Not only is this a sane memoir of madness but it may well be the sanest, most mordant take on the subject."
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Frances Wilson, Daily Telegraph In forms I've never seen before, in ways that feel revelatory and imperative to the work we might all be trying to make next, [Howland] shows how an I can also exist within a collective; how, for some communities, constantly subverting one's own wants and needs is simply necessary in order that the group survive.
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Lynn Steger Strong, Los Angeles Times Full of calibrated grace, and startlingly unmediated...[W-3] is remarkably perceptive and wise.
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Katy Waldman, the New Yorker Howland is rather like a chameleon, and her insights and questions are intimate but also have a universal quality.... A mysteriously talented writer, her innovative work fortunately has been revived so that Howland will have the attention she deserved, even though she did not seek it in her life.
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the National Book Review A gallery of marvelously, devastatingly precise miniatures of Howland's fellow inmates. Howland's eye for detail is unfailingly sharp. She has the cartoonist's knack of seizing and drawing out a person's specific mannerisms and fixations, but what results is never caricature; rather, her depiction of the patients of W-3 is sensitive and sympathetic but powerfully unsentimental.
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Sarah Chihaya, Bookforum
Like certain other writers on the edge of the canon–Jean Rhys, Elizabeth Smart, Tove Ditlevsen–Bette Howland wrote with an urgent dissatisfaction and narrative reluctance that make her work... unforgettable.
–Julie Phillips, 4Columns
Style is a great preservative in literature and the quality that Bette Howland's... writing possess[es] in abundance, and the reason [her] work has proved worth preserving.
–Joseph Epstein, Commentary
In W-3, Howland's unforgiving descriptions disallow the reader from moving unfeelingly through the psychiatric ward where she witnessed so much. In that hardness there is recognition, and in that recognition, compassion. Howland's writing demands the same recognition, even if, like her, it had to be lost before it could be found.
–Sage Behr, South Side Weekly