Book review: Heavy Light, by Horatio Clare

Horatio Clare PIC: James BedfordHoratio Clare PIC: James Bedford
Horatio Clare PIC: James Bedford
Self-contradictory yet brilliantly written, Horatio Clare’s account of his mental breakdown, treatment and recovery is essential reading, writes Stuart Kelly

It would be somewhat curious if this were not a somewhat curious book. The first part of Horatio Clare’s memoir, subtitled “A Journey through Madness, Mania & Healing” details with admirable candour the delusions and warning signs in the run up to him being sectioned. The second part deals with his understandable desire to know more about mental health provision and the drugs, prescribed and un-prescribed, he took. How the two parts correlate might turn the reader into a diagnostician.

The opening sections are written with artful and deliberate derangement. It begins with a family skiing holiday, and Clare is paranoid; rightly so as he is trying to take his personal stash of cannabis through customs. Then it edges, by slow steps, into the abyss. The ski resort is actually a conference to prove we are capable of world peace. Everyone is from another country’s secret services. A TV report about drones over an airport is proof that aliens have made first contact. Every innocent remark has to be decoded.

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