Having had a family history rampant with mental health issues myself, I was especially interested in reading about the perceptions of bipolar disorder both from the person who has lived with it, and from the points of view of others who loved, couldn't tolerate, and/or
…more treated Dr. Perry Baird. Mimi Baird did a great job in presenting Perry Baird's accounts of his stays at several different mental hospitals, especially gripping because he was trying to study himself in the process during a time when treatments were barbaric at best. His writings are interspersed with inpatient treatment notes from the hospitals where he had been confined. These different accounts made me curious- his being colored by his disease, and the hospitals perhaps colored by agenda. I suppose that the truth lies somewhere in between, which I believe was what the author was ferreting out.
I know firsthand about the extreme difficulty of living with a family member who has a serious mental illness, and could relate to those who cared about Dr. Baird, but who also became unable to cope with the destruction left in his path. It is a sad, complicated, and real problem that families face, and the author did a marvelous job of integrating all of these facets into a short and highly readable book. There are many good discussion points in He Wanted the Moon, which would make it an excellent book club pick. (less)