The Death of Small Creatures

By (author): Trisha Cull

In her lyrical memoir The Death of Small Creatures, Trisha Cull lays bare her struggles with bulimia, bipolar disorder and substance abuse. Interspersing snatches of conversations, letters, blog entries and clinical notes with intimate poetic narrative, Cull evokes an accessible experience of mental illness. In The Death of Small Creatures, Cull strives to cope with her hopelessness. She finds comfort in the company of her two pet rabbits until one of them dies as a result of her lethargy. She numbs herself with alcohol. She validates her self-worth by seeking the love of men–any and all men–and three relationships significantly impact her life: her marriage to Leigh, a much older man; her unrequited love for Dr. P, her therapist; and her healthier relationship with Richard, an American she meets through her blog. She tries drugs–Neo Citran, Ativan, Wellbutrin, crack, crystal meth–and after two hospitalizations, she undergoes electroconvulsive therapy. Haunting and expressive, this immersive memoir explores love in all its facets–needy, obsessive, healthy, self-directed–and plunges the reader headlong into the intense and immediate experience of mental illness.

AUTHOR

Trisha Cull

Trisha Cull is a graduate of the University of British Columbia’s MFA Creative Writing program. Her work has been published in Room of One’s Own, Descant, subTerrain, Geist, The New Quarterly, The Dalhousie Review and PRISM. She was the winner of Lichen‘s “Tracking a Serial Poet” contest in 2006, PRISM‘s Communications Award for Literary Non-fiction in 2007, and was also the winner of the Prairie Fire’s Bliss 2007 Carman Poetry Award. Cull lives in Victoria, BC.


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In her lyrical memoir The Death of Small Creatures, Trisha Cull lays bare her struggles with bulimia, bipolar disorder and substance abuse. Interspersing snatches of conversations, letters, blog entries and clinical notes with intimate poetic narrative, Cull evokes an accessible experience of mental illness. In The Death of Small Creatures, Cull strives to cope with her hopelessness. She finds comfort in the company of her two pet rabbits until one of them dies as a result of her lethargy. She numbs herself with alcohol. She validates her self-worth by seeking the love of men–any and all men–and three relationships significantly impact her life: her marriage to Leigh, a much older man; her unrequited love for Dr. P, her therapist; and her healthier relationship with Richard, an American she meets through her blog. She tries drugs–Neo Citran, Ativan, Wellbutrin, crack, crystal meth–and after two hospitalizations, she undergoes electroconvulsive therapy. Haunting and expressive, this immersive memoir explores love in all its facets–needy, obsessive, healthy, self-directed–and plunges the reader headlong into the intense and immediate experience of mental illness.

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Details

Dimensions:

240 Pages
9in * 6in * 0.59in
1.01lb

Published:

April 18, 2015

Publisher:

Nightwood Editions

ISBN:

9780889713079

Featured In:

All Books

Language:

eng

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