Barbara Claypole White tackles the impossible in The Promise
Between Us. She lets you into the mind of someone with obsessive compulsive
disorder just enough to give you a realistic look at what their life must be
like, and then reigns it back a little so that you don’t shut the book in
dismay. Katie Mack abandoned her young daughter when she was just an infant as
thoughts of harming her swarmed her mind. She thought the girl would be safer
without her, and by the time she got treatment and found herself in a
semi-stable state, her husband had moved on and told their daughter that she
was dead. Over a decade later Katie randomly comes back into contact with her
daughter, only to realize that her own mental illness was now manifesting
itself in her daughter. Her attempts to help her and deal with her own
continuing issues make up the bulk of the story.
Some books are easier to read than others. If you’re looking
for a fluffy beach read for entertainment purposes, this is not it. But it is an
important read, and a timely one. OCD has received some national attention
lately, largely due to John Green’s novel about the disease and his admission
that he suffers from it as well. If you want to understand more about it (guess
what, it’s not just about compulsively washing your hands) and how it can
destroy people and families (and build them back up again), then this is a must
read.
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