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~~ Download The Man Who Walked Away: A Novel, by Maud Casey

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The Man Who Walked Away: A Novel, by Maud Casey

The Man Who Walked Away: A Novel, by Maud Casey



The Man Who Walked Away: A Novel, by Maud Casey

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The Man Who Walked Away: A Novel, by Maud Casey

In a trance-like state, Albert walks--from Bordeaux to Poitiers, from Chaumont to Macon, and farther afield to Turkey, Austria, Russia--all over Europe. When he walks, he is called a vagrant, a mad man. He is chased out of towns and villages, ridiculed and imprisoned. When the reverie of his walking ends, he's left wondering where he is, with no memory of how he got there. His past exists only in fleeting images.

Loosely based on the case history of Albert Dadas, a psychiatric patient in the hospital of St. André in Bordeaux in the nineteenth century, The Man Who Walked Away imagines Albert's wanderings and the anguish that caused him to seek treatment with a doctor who would create a diagnosis for him, a narrative for his pain.

In a time when mental health diagnosis is still as much art as science, Maud Casey takes us back to its tentative beginnings and offers us an intimate relationship between one doctor and his patient as, together, they attempt to reassemble a lost life. Through Albert she gives us a portrait of a man untethered from place and time who, in spite of himself, kept setting out, again and again, in search of wonder and astonishment.

  • Sales Rank: #1374482 in Books
  • Published on: 2014-12-30
  • Released on: 2014-12-30
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 8.22" h x .67" w x 5.53" l, 1.00 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 240 pages

Review

"Lyrical in its style and fascinating in its psychology, Casey’s narrative provokes a host of intriguing questions beyond those the Doctor raises, and Casey is wise enough as an author not to provide easy answers." ―starred review, Kirkus Reviews

"Casey’s haunting third novel is both unconventional and engaging . . . Our need for stories, our relationship with time, the inevitability of loss, and our startling endurance all resonate through her beautifully crafted interweaving of image and observation, fairy tale and fact." ―starred review, Publishers Weekly

"Maud Casey's The Man Who Walked Away is a haunting, deeply empathetic, and rigorously intelligent novel. It is also a seamless marvel of construction and language. The Man Who Walked Away cast a spell from which I never wished to wake." ―Alice Sebold, author of THE LOVELY BONES and THE ALMOST MOON

"Pay attention, this lovely novel urges. As Maud Casey spins this mysteriously urgent tale of patient and doctor entwining, her quicksilver prose yields one astonishing image after another: each moment fleetingly beautiful, each character here--here!--and nowhere else. As this novel is like nothing else. Reading it is a singularly moving experience." ―Andrea Barrett, author of SHIP FEVER and ARCHANGEL

"The Man Who Walked Away is a book of enchantments of an extremely intelligent kind. Dreamlike and sharply real, the novel unfolds in a nineteenth-century asylum where all the inmates have their own poetry of delusion, fear turned to metaphor. Wildly original fiction, with a particular melancholy magic." ―Joan Silber, author of IDEAS OF HEAVEN and THE SIZE OF THE WORLD

About the Author
Maud Casey is the author of two novels, The Shape of Things to Come, a New York Times Notable, and Genealogy, and a collection of stories, Drastic. She is the recipient of the Calvino Prize and has received fellowships from the Fundación Valparaiso, Hawthornden International Writers Retreat, Château de Lavigny, and the Passa Porta residency at Villa Hellebosch. She lives in Washington, D.C., and teaches at the University of Maryland and in the low-residency M.F.A. program at Warren Wilson.

Most helpful customer reviews

11 of 11 people found the following review helpful.
A Journey with a begining but no end in sight!
By D_shrink
This is a fictionalized account of a real person named Albert Dadas, who lived in 19th century France. He was about 20yo at the time the story takes place. Albert was hospitalized in a mental hospital named St. Andre in Bordeaux, France, in real life. The story takes place before much of what we know of mental illness in these times had yet to be uncovered, and believe me there is still much more to learn. Albert suffered from a Dissociative Disorder called Fugue. The author does a great job of explaining this disorder and all the other ones of the fictional characters who interact with Albert and the doctor treating him in the story. The basic manifestations of a Fugue state are that you wander about, sometimes for a few hours sometimes for months or intermittently for years as was the case with Albert. The problems is that the person seldom remembers much or anything that happened while they were in this fugue state. It should be stated that the person seems generally normal if not a bit strange to most people. Albert did engage in some rather strange behavior, but his biggest worry was that no one think him a vagrant as he saw that to be the lowest of the low. Let me give one brief quote from page 22 of the pre-release edition "He walks for days without stopping, without eating, without sleeping in order to feel the gift of astonishment." The problem is that the person experiencing this disorder, normally set off by some tragic occurrence as was Albert's case, is running away from something and never towards anything so that he can therefore never arrive.

The story revolves around the interplay between his psychiatrist and himself with the intermingling of other psychiatric patients stories woven into the main plot line.

If you are interested in a fictionalized story of a rare mental disorder [fugue occurs in about 20/10,000 people in a general population] this will be up your alley, if you are looking for a fast paced thriller you may be left somewhat wanting. This is a nice book to read at your leisure over several days. I would also like to mention that the fugue state is occasionally found in severe alcoholism and somewhat in some forms of epilepsy.

8 of 8 people found the following review helpful.
Not the poetry that I expected . . .
By Ken Deshaies
Reading some of the reviews here prior to reading this book, I anticipated a much different experience. While I found the story interesting, and some of the characters engaging, I also found the writing somewhat pedantic. You could speedread portions of this book and not miss anything. I kept moving forward just to find if (a) Albert's memory was going to be recalled or (b) if some solution to his problem was forthcoming. Neither happened, and it left me feeling more that I was, in fact, reading a bit of non-fiction rather than an engaging dialogue.

If phrasing repeated over and over, and dozens of times throughout the book, is considered poetry, then just consider me a non-poet. This read did not encourage me to pick up any other of Casey's books. (And I am fairly used to that happening with great authors).

Certainly the book will appeal to many (the reviews here make that clear), but if you prefer novels with tight writing that pulls you along, this will likely not be your cup of tea.

2 of 2 people found the following review helpful.
An unusual book, but the overall feeling conveyed by author Maud Casey is one of compassion
By Bookreporter
The setting for THE MAN WHO WALKED AWAY is the mental asylum at St. Andre in Bordeaux, France in 1886. It is a refuge for the patients who reside there, as they are treated with respect and dignity. The staff tries its best to keep things orderly, pleasant and under control, which is not always easy given the wide range of behaviors the patients exhibit. Psychiatry is still very much in its infancy. The patients suffer from illnesses/conditions that have neither actual names nor standard treatments. They live quiet lives and follow set schedules for meals and outdoor exercise. This structure gives them a sense of calm they all need.

One day, a new patient is brought to the asylum gates with a note attached to his waistcoat that reads "He is off his rocker." This stranger, named Albert, naturally causes a ripple of excitement and curiosity among the other patients. Marian believes the sun has stolen her stomach, Samuel wears an oversized coat no matter what the weather and fears everything, Rachel insists she has a frog in her stomach that tells her what piano music to play, and the veteran is jumpy and suspicious --- his mind is still back in the war.

Albert is a walker who has journeyed far and wide in an almost trance-like state for several years. He has wandered across Europe and beyond. He wears holes in his shoes, which he cushions with soft moss to protect his feet. He has no map and no purpose for his journeys, just the dogged need/obsession to be moving forward on his feet night and day. He has been jailed and chased out of villages as an unwelcome vagrant. He has ended up in unfamiliar cities and walked along river banks of many rivers. And the long walks are both enchanting and exhausting.

When Albert finally stops walking, he's relieved that either his legs or his arms ache because he knows his body has not yet disappeared. He has bits and pieces of memories of living in a small cottage with his father. Possibly he remembers a friend named Baptiste with whom he might have served in the army and later deserted it. He is certain about very little. Whatever memories Albert makes during his random and obsessive journeys are recalled later as fuzzy impressions. It is as though he holds a handful of jigsaw puzzle pieces, but there is no picture on the box lid to help him assemble the puzzle of his life into something coherent and recognizable.

Albert is also a puzzle as well as a challenge to the kind Doctor who treats him. The study of mental health problems is quite new in the late 19th century, and very little is actually known about diagnosing and treating mental illness. The Doctor (he is never named in the book, but is capitalized) is very patient and a good listener. He tries to help Albert unearth memories, no easy task since Albert cannot not even recall his age. Their daily sessions are brief so that Albert can rest both his body and mind. The Doctor is not without his own quirks and obsessions. As he rattles through the village on his new bicycle that he loves, he calls out anatomical names by body system. He begins with the skeletal system and works outward. He often repeats his favorite word ("Lacrimal, lacrimal, lacrimal"). He also has bits of hazy memories that he is unable to place in context and becomes quite obsessed with solving the puzzle that is Albert.

THE MAN WHO WALKED AWAY is a most unusual book. Some parts of it have a fantasy-like quality of writing, especially the descriptions of Albert's trance-like walking. But the book is very realistic when describing the interactions between patients and the asylum staff. Although Albert's illness is the main plot, much emphasis is placed upon the Doctor, and the story often bounces back and forth between the two men. The overall feeling conveyed by author Maud Casey is one of compassion for these patients who are struggling to live as normal a life as their illnesses will allow them.

Reviewed by Carole Turner

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