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Odyssey of a Wandering Mind

The Strange Tale of Sara Mayfield, Author

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Sara Mayfield was born into Alabama's governing elite in 1905 and grew up in a social circle that included Zelda Sayre, Sara Haardt, and Tallulah and Eugenia Bankhead. After winning a Goucher College short story contest judged by H. L. Mencken, Mayfield became friends with Mencken and his circle, then visited with Scott and Zelda Fitzgerald and hobnobbed with the literati while traveling in Europe after a failed marriage. Back in Tuscaloosa after the war, however, she became increasingly paranoid about perceived conspiracies arrayed against her. Finally, her mother and brother committed her to Bryce Hospital for the Insane, where she remained for the next seventeen years.
Throughout her life, Mayfield kept journals, wrote fiction, and produced thousands of letters while nursing the ambition that had driven her since childhood: to write and publish books. During her confinement, Mayfield assiduously recorded her experiences and her determined efforts—sometimes delusional, always savvy—to overturn her diagnosis and return to the world as a sane, independent adult. At fifty-nine, she was released from Bryce and later obtained a decree of "having been restored to sanity." She went on to publish noteworthy literary biographies of the Menckens and the Fitzgeralds, finally achieving her quest to become the author of books and her own life.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      October 23, 2023
      This mesmerizing account by poet Horne (Tell the World You’re a Wildflower) skillfully pieces together the disjointed life of biographer Sara Mayfield (1905–1979). Mayfield was raised in Montgomery, Alabama’s upper crust alongside friends Zelda Sayre (later Fitzgerald) and actress Tallulah Bankhead. Mayfield lived a privileged and variegated life (among other pursuits, she invented a new plastic and founded an “unemployment colony” that paid men to clear timber), but in her middle age she began to experience “delusional episodes,” leading her family to commit her to a psychiatric facility in 1948. Upon her release 17 years later, she published biographies of the Fitzgeralds and H.L. Mencken, followed by a novel imagining a relationship between Leonardo da Vinci and the model for the Mona Lisa. Horne excels at balancing the diverse phases of Mayfield’s complicated life and offers a sensitive appraisal of her time as a psychiatric patient, suggesting that encephalitis might have caused her symptoms and that her family’s decision to commit her likely stemmed from a mixture of genuine concern and sexist assumptions that her myriad business pursuits were signs of mental disorder. Well-researched and compassionately written, this beguiling tale of madness and literature shines.

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  • English

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