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Biographical note: Catherine Eisner’s fiction has appeared regularly in a number of UK literary journals, including Ambit and Mslexia. She is an Associate of the Royal College of Art; this, together with her interests in anthropology and design, reflects in her writings, which extend from a study of sex-attractant pheromones in literature, to researches into the little-known 19th Century shamanistic culture of the autonomous Russian republic of Mariy El.
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EAN13: 9781844712991 ISBN: 9781844712991 Author: Catherine Eisner Title: Sister Morphine Series: Salt Modern Fiction Product class: BB Language: eng Audience: General/trade BIC subject category: FB Publisher: Salt Publishing Pub date: 01-Jun-08 Extent: 496pp Height: 234 mm Width: 153 mm Thickness: 39 mm Weight: 744 gms Supplier: Gardners Books Supplier: Ingram Book Group Supplier: Inbooks (James Bennett) Availability: NP Price: GBP 14.99 Price: USD 28.95 Rights: World
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description/annotation: Masterful, darkly comic and unputdownably brilliant, this first novel by Catherine Eisner is an instant 21st-century classic. Sister Morphine tackles themes of suicidality, sibling murder, child abuse, morbid self-harm, guilt, jealousy, incest, drug addiction, infidelity, illegitimacy, obsessive compulsion, bereavement and a case of grand larceny in the second degree. All wrapped up in the confidential case notes of a Community Psychiatric Nurse exploring the multifaceted side effects of psychoactive drugs.
Main description: Masterful, darkly comic and unputdownably brilliant, this first novel by Catherine Eisner is an instant 21st-century classic. Sister Morphine tackles themes of suicidality, sibling murder, child abuse, morbid self-harm, guilt, jealousy, incest, drug addiction, infidelity, illegitimacy, obsessive compulsion, bereavement and a case of grand larceny in the second degree.
Eisner’s suite of women’s narratives is premised as confidential pages from the case notes of a Community Psychiatric Nurse (CPN), documenting neuroses and drug therapy interventions. These disturbing case histories, reconstituted as fictions by the CPN for reasons of legal privilege, explore the relationship between aberrant antisocial behaviour among women and the multifaceted, unpredictable side effects of psychoactive prescription drugs and their more bizarre manifestations as criminal behaviour.
Table of contents: Soft Skin (Felicia F. – Alprazolam) Mr & Mrs Camilla Revisited (Charlotte N. – Buspirone) You Better Go Now (Zoe W. – Amitriptyline) One Minute Apart (Elenore S. – Lorazepam) Confessions of a Kissee (Eveline M. – Buproprion) The Cheated Eye (Miriam R. – Fluvoxamine) Cousin Ludwig’s Subtraction Game (Grete B. – Imipramine) Honeymoon Without Maps (Esther G. – Thioridazine) Elegy from a Locked Drawer (Marianne E. – Clonidine) Red Coffee (Irina P. – Carbamazepine) Dispossession (Mary H. – Desipramine) A Stranger in Blood (Elspeth P. – Mirtazapine) Thought Police (Theresa O. – Temazepam) The Eleven Surviving Works of L v. K (Isolde B. – Diazepam) Three Tiered Grave (Roberta J. – Clozapine)
Podcast
Extract from Dispossession
Mary ‘H’ (Desipramine), in her Lament
of a Girl Led Astray, puts her piano proficiency
to practical purpose.
‘For many years, I admit, yes, we’d conducted
a sort of meretricious relationship, which had branded
me, I suppose, as a species of ‘kept woman’,
for there was a lighthearted understanding that we should
assist each other financially from time to time, when low
on funds.
Hence, when Douglas stole from the warmth of
my bed in the small hours, I would often run
to the piano to vocalize my penniless state
in a patter song of my own devising . . .
Lament of a Girl Led Astray
Put a tenner on the table as yer leavin’,
Put a tenner on the table, won’tcha,
dear.
Put a tenner on the table if yer love me,
’Cos a girl ’as gotta live . . .
’cos a girl ’as gotta live . . .
’Cos a girl ’as gotta live on more than
Cold and bitter beer.
The mock pathos and jangling honky-tonk beerhall
accompaniment had generally been productive
of more than a tenner.
This Score and Recorded Music is released
with the agreement of the composers under
a tripartite copyright © Grace Jardine-Wilkinson
/ Mark Bannister / Catherine Isolde Eisner
Play Manor
Park Rap (1.8 MB)
View excerpt as PDF: Click here to view a sample (160 KB)
Excerpt from book:
One Minute Apart (Elenore S. – Lorazepam)
Assessment Summary (extract): Despite initially accepting the need for supportive counselling to address her anxieties, the patient has paradoxically attempted to avoid treatment during the recent crises, and, after her major loss, is increasingly preoccupied with suicidal ideations, at which times she refuses to make the emergency call. At these times the patient, by rejecting appropriate increased levels of care and emergency interventions, remains acutely agitated and overwhelmed by self-destructive thoughts. The patient appears to be unconsciously seeking to avoid taking responsibility for symptom management or life changes and, until these issues are better clarified, a state of almost continual crisis is predicted.
Patient ID: CPN0268191058: Elenore S. Occupation: Geopolitical cartographer Drug: Lorazepam Drug Class: Benzodiazepine anti-anxiety sedative Common side effects: Confusion. Changes in vision. Memory disturbance. May impair judgement.
I am a mad woman. This is a story of vanity and foolishness yet I am not so mad as to name those who have made a fool out of me.
The beginning was innocent enough. ‘Pen Pal’s Plea’, I read in the letters column of our local newspaper. ‘Schoolgirl, 18 years, seeks friendship with similar through exchange of letters. Will you be my pen pal?’ The letter was signed C. Beauclaire; the address was a P.O. Box number in a small town in West Africa.
But what prompted me to clip out the item and fold it into my purse? It was an involuntary act, I rationalised to myself long afterwards; I had been powerless to repress such a capricious impulse, I reasoned, as I reflected on those first desperate lonely months of abandonment which had followed the death of my much loved partner, Christina. She had first won my devotion at university, when she had dwelt in the rarefied air of her final year and I, a fresher, had worshipped her from afar, unnoticed, on the outer fringes of her coterie. Then, years later, both working on our doctorates, we had rediscovered each other and our long enraptured journeying together had begun, our intimate desires so intuitively attuned that I believed, rightly, that such rare tendresses could be ended only by my perfect lover’s death or the death of love itself.
The case being the former, and, at that time, madly inconsolable, I had been prescribed, absurdly, over 5 mg of Lorazapam daily (for hyperanxiety; I was sleeping alone at night as the sole occupant of a house for the first time in my adult life), and thus I had entered that long dark vale of misrule, where my waywardness and the erratic querulousness of my grief had ultimately estranged me from most of our friends; indeed – I admit- eventually, even by my favourite niece was I shunned.
So, that evening, when I smoothed flat the folded press clipping on the table-top, I believe I can truthfully swear there was no sinister intent in my opening my writing case and reaching for my pen. I thought, merely, selfishly, with my drug-induced twisted logic of the newly bereft: ‘Why not make amends for all those lost lonely youthful years before I met Christina?’
Previous review quote: Not only does [she] use straightforward suspense … but gives us, as a painter does, areas of intriguing shadow for us to wonder over … a genuinely unsettling voice, at once comic, intelligent and slightly, scarily deranged … a true technical triumph. Kate Clanchy Mslexia Previous review quote: Erotic … enthralling … very pictorial … very original. Neville Marten Ink |
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