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Susanna Kaysen

American author (born 1948)

Susanna Kaysen (born November 11, 1948) is an American author, best known for her 1993 memoir Girl, Interrupted.

Contents

  • 1 Background
  • 2 Bibliography
  • 3 References
  • 4 External links

Background

Kaysen was born and raised in Cambridge, M*achusetts. She is the daughter of Annette (Neutra) and economist Carl Kaysen, a professor at MIT and former advisor to President John F. Kennedy. Her family is Jewish.

Kaysen attended high school at the Commonwealth School in Boston, and The Cambridge School of Weston, before being sent to McLean Hospital in 1967 to undergo psychiatric treatment for depression. While there, she was diagnosed with borderline personality disorder. She was released after 18 months. She later drew on this experience for her 1993 memoir Girl, Interrupted, which was adapted into a film in 1999; she was portrayed by Winona Ryder.

Kaysen has one sister and is divorced. She lived for a time in the Faroe Islands, upon which experience her novel Far Afield is based.

Bibliography

  • Asa, As I Knew Him, 1987, ISBN:978-0-679-75377-3
  • Far Afield, 1990, ISBN:978-0-679-75376-6
  • Girl, Interrupted, 1993, ISBN:978-1-85381-835-6
  • The Camera My Mother Gave Me, 2001, ISBN:978-0-679-76343-7
  • Cambridge, 2014, ISBN:978-0-385-35025-9

References

    External links

    • Austin Chronicle interview with Kaysen, via the Wayback Machine
    • Susanna Kaysen author profile at Penguin Random House