We are currently making improvements to the Audible site. In an effort to enhance the accessibility experience for our customers, we have created a page to more easily navigate the new experience, available at the web address www.audible.com/access.
Brain on Fire: My Month of Madness | [Susannah Cahalan]
Play Brain on Fire: My Month of Madness

Brain on Fire: My Month of Madness

  • UNABRIDGED
  • by Susannah Cahalan
  • Narrated by Heather Henderson
  • Whispersync for Voice-ready
  • Your Likes make Audible better!

    'Likes' are shared on Facebook and Audible.com. We use your 'likes' to improve Audible.com for all our listeners.

    You can turn off Audible.com sharing from your Account Details page.

    OK
  • Regular Price :$23.07
  • Whispersync for Voice

    Listen to Brain on Fire, then pick up right where you left off with the Kindle book. Learn more

Two ways to buy!

What's Trending in Bios & Memoirs:

  • Average Customer Rating
  • Overall
    (141)
    Performance
    (125)
    Story
    (127)
 
  • LENGTH
    7 hrs and 48 mins
  • RELEASE DATE
    11-13-12
  • AUDIO FORMATS
    About Audio Formats
    2 3 4 Enhanced Audio
 

People who bought this also bought...

Publisher's Summary

In 2009, Susannah Cahalan woke up in a strange hospital room strapped to a bed, under guard, and unable to move or speak. Her medical records - from a month-long hospital stay of which she had no memory - reported psychosis, violence, and dangerous instability. Yet, only weeks earlier she had been a healthy, ambitious twenty-four-year-old, six months into her first serious relationship and a sparkling career as a cub reporter.

Susannah’s astonishing memoir chronicles the swift path of her illness and the lucky, last-minute intervention led by one of the few doctors capable of saving her life. Weeks ticked by and Susannah moved inexplicably from violence to catatonia. Over one million dollars worth of blood tests and brain scans revealed nothing. The exhausted doctors were ready to commit her to the psychiatric ward, until the celebrated neurologist, Dr. Souhel Najjar, joined her team. With the use of a simple - yet ingenious - test, he was able to make a lifesaving diagnosis - revealing a newly discovered autoimmune disorder in which the body attacks the brain.

With sharp reporting drawn from hospital records, scientific research, and interviews with doctors and family, Brain on Fire is a crackling mystery and an unflinching, gripping personal story that marks the debut of an extraordinary writer.

©2012 Original material © 2012 Susannah Cahalan. Recorded by arrangement with Free Press, a division of Simon & Schuster, Inc. (P)2012 (p) 2012 HighBridge Company

What the Critics Say

"Engrossing.... Unquestionably, an important book on both a human and a medical level. Cahalan’s elegantly-written memoir of her dramatic descent into madness opens up discussion of the cutting-edge neuroscience behind a disease that may affect thousands of people around the world, and it offers powerful insight into the subjective workings of our minds." (Mehmet Oz, MD, Professor and Vice Chair, Department of Surgery, New York Presbyterian-Columbia Medical Center)

"Brain on Fire reads like a scientific thriller, but with a profound and moving philosophy at its heart." (David B. Agus, M.D., Professor of Medicine and Engineering, University of Southern California, and author of The End of Illness)

What Members Say

Average Customer Rating

4.1 (141 ratings)
5 star
 (53)
4 star
 (54)
3 star
 (27)
2 star
 (4)
1 star
 (3)
Overall
4.2 (127 ratings)
5 star
 (55)
4 star
 (45)
3 star
 (22)
2 star
 (3)
1 star
 (2)
Story
4.2 (125 ratings)
5 star
 (56)
4 star
 (44)
3 star
 (18)
2 star
 (5)
1 star
 (2)
Performance
  •  
    Douglas Auburn, WA, United States 11-20-12
    Douglas Auburn, WA, United States 11-20-12 Member Since 2008

    College English professor who loves classic literature, psychology, neurology and hates pop trash like Twilight and Fifty Shades of Grey.

    HELPFUL VOTES
    256
    ratings
    REVIEWS
    288
    176
    FOLLOWERS
    FOLLOWING
    47
    26
    Overall
    Performance
    Story
    "Compelling and Interesting..."

    A riveting account of a young woman's struggle with what only appeared to be a complete mental breakdown and her struggles to find a correct diagnosis in the hurry-up, conveyor-belt world of American medicine. It is a story both of personal endurance and an indictment of the current medical system, deeply engaging and enlightening at once.

    9 of 9 people found this review helpful
  •  
    Dorothy hamilton, MT, United States 12-11-12
    Dorothy hamilton, MT, United States 12-11-12 Member Since 2010
    HELPFUL VOTES
    16
    ratings
    REVIEWS
    37
    8
    FOLLOWERS
    FOLLOWING
    0
    0
    Overall
    Performance
    Story
    "Unique take on root of mental illness"

    The narrator is great. She makes the book better. The content is amazing. In the beginning of the story, I did find it hard to sympathize with the author's plight because she came off as very annoying. However, this annoyance faded as the story progressed.

    Something that is overlooked in the main premise of this story is how important medical advocacy is. The parents of the author are the reason she got the care she did. The story really is amazing. At the same time, it is sad to think of how many others were erroneously diagnosed with mental illness that was actually caused by something else (no spoilers from me).

    This book is a nice complement to "My Stoke of Insight." I do wish the author had narrated. I'm not sure why she didn't...but perhaps it would have been poor narration. The narrator adds to the story and makes it a 5 star book.

    4 of 4 people found this review helpful
  •  
    Danielle Cartersville, GA, United States 01-14-13
    Danielle Cartersville, GA, United States 01-14-13 Member Since 2011

    flyballcairn

    HELPFUL VOTES
    8
    ratings
    REVIEWS
    72
    8
    FOLLOWERS
    FOLLOWING
    2
    0
    Overall
    Performance
    Story
    "Captivating Tale"

    This book tells the compelling story of a young woman's mysterious illness that manifests as psychosis but turns out to be something else. What is eerily intriguing about the story is that the author remembers very little of it and she had to discover what happened during this period and try to piece it back together so that you feel as if you are going on the journey with her. Narration was excellent. Highly recommend this very human journey through a medical mystery.

    3 of 3 people found this review helpful
  •  
    Harriet Tigard, OR, United States 01-08-13
    Harriet Tigard, OR, United States 01-08-13 Member Since 2009
    HELPFUL VOTES
    6
    ratings
    REVIEWS
    19
    4
    FOLLOWERS
    FOLLOWING
    0
    0
    Overall
    Performance
    Story
    "Not a standard choice in genre for me!!!"

    Outstanding book made so much more intense because it is real. I generally read scifi and dystopian novels but felt compelled to try this book and I was not disappointed. It is well written and the author does an amazing job of helping the reader feel like they are witnessing everything play out.

    I cried in frustration and happiness. I am rarely moved so strongly. I highly recommend this book. I felt compelled to complete the book in one sitting and struggled to set it aside to go to bed and stayed up way too late before forcing myself to sleep.

    There are lots of dashed hopes, ups and downs, and a general roller coaster ride to hell and back. I was on that roller coaster in spite of the knowledge that I knew the eventual outcome.

    I found myself looking everyone and everything up online. Susannah Cahalan was brutally honest and utilized all the data available to make sense of this period of her life. Again, it is an amazing book. Highly recommended!!

    3 of 3 people found this review helpful
  •  
    Pearl Glacier California 03-09-13
    Pearl Glacier California 03-09-13 Member Since 2011

    Epic

    HELPFUL VOTES
    10
    ratings
    REVIEWS
    9
    9
    FOLLOWERS
    FOLLOWING
    1
    1
    Overall
    Performance
    Story
    "Enter into a psychotic episode..."

    I will not seek to give away things that would make listening to this less suspenseful, but rather focus on reasons for listening to this book. Susannah Cahalan tells the very personal and insightful story of her flight into psychosis. Her authorship allows the reader to contemplate what it might be like to become mad, and I believe increase ones compassion for those who also suffer from mental illness. Her investigation into the aftermath also details the emotions that her family felt- something that rounds out her story and at times brought tears to my eyes. The love extended around her I believe brought her through the journey with the ability to write this narrative. The stigma of being mentally ill is overcome by her writing a very detailed account of her journey, which I salute her for! The book also reflects upon the physiological basis of psychosis. Critically, I think that she still stigmatizes the mental hospital although rightly it was not the place that would have been most healing for her. I found her episode similar to what many manic patients I have known experience, as afterwards their episode is shrouded in partial memory which she overcomes by video that was taken and accounts of her loved ones. Her story should challenge doctors to continue investigating when a combination of symptoms don't make complete sense. Her story should allow one more empathy when we encounter those who are suffering with such a mind bending illness.

    2 of 2 people found this review helpful
  •  
    Kim Spokane, WA, United States 05-14-13
    Kim Spokane, WA, United States 05-14-13 Member Since 2009

    Avid reader my whole life - addicted to audio. I listen to books & podcasts while working, driving, sleeping......

    HELPFUL VOTES
    291
    ratings
    REVIEWS
    230
    94
    FOLLOWERS
    FOLLOWING
    52
    15
    Overall
    Performance
    Story
    "Not what I was looking for"

    I'm assuming this is the first book for the author - it wasn't bad but maybe some more time to recover and/or gain some experience is in order before she tries again. I guess it would be OK for a younger audience or for a short trip if you're desperate for something to listen to - I've heard worse.

    1 of 1 people found this review helpful
  •  
    Jami VICTOR, NY, United States 04-20-13
    Jami VICTOR, NY, United States 04-20-13 Member Since 2012

    Say something about yourself!

    HELPFUL VOTES
    17
    ratings
    REVIEWS
    30
    28
    FOLLOWERS
    FOLLOWING
    0
    5
    Overall
    Performance
    Story
    "A Memoir of Madness"

    This was a very good memoir. It is chilling to think that you can be at work one day and then have your brain attack you so that you are no longer yourself. How scary for her and her family. Wow! I'm familiar with autoimmune diseases through first-hand experience, and its amazing at the wide range of ways the body can turn against itself.

    I thought that there was a good mix of her struggle with the disease and scientific data about the disease. Some of the books I read are way too heavy on the research, but I found that all of the information provided in this book was useful to get a better understanding of the illness. I also enjoyed the part of memories being manufactured and how you can spread incorrect information so that others also believe they remember the same thing.

    The narrator was very good; at times, I forgot it wasn't the author herself speaking. I imagine this would be hard to do, given the fact that some of the author's terror and moods have to be portrayed. In this case, the narrator was an asset to the story.

    I am glad that she took the time to write about this disease so that others can be educated and can learn the signs of this disease. Like the author, I cringe to think of how many people have received a psychiatric diagnosis, when in reality, there is a physical cause for their behavior.

    1 of 1 people found this review helpful
  •  
    John Norfolk, VA, United States 03-25-13
    John Norfolk, VA, United States 03-25-13 Member Since 2009

    Loves to read, but pretty much always needs to get a lot out of it. Doesn't mean fiction can't educate, Michener, Conroy, LeCarre

    HELPFUL VOTES
    4
    ratings
    REVIEWS
    24
    10
    FOLLOWERS
    FOLLOWING
    1
    0
    Overall
    Performance
    Story
    "Pretty Interesting"
    Would you say that listening to this book was time well-spent? Why or why not?

    Yes it was time well-spent, interesting to hear about how the brain works and someone's life can be turned upside down.


    Have you listened to any of Heather Henderson’s other performances before? How does this one compare?

    not sure, but she was very good!


    1 of 1 people found this review helpful
  •  
    Crystal Angier, NC, United States 03-13-13
    Crystal Angier, NC, United States 03-13-13 Member Since 2012
    HELPFUL VOTES
    1
    ratings
    REVIEWS
    7
    7
    FOLLOWERS
    FOLLOWING
    0
    0
    Overall
    Performance
    Story
    "Engaging an Informing"
    What made the experience of listening to Brain on Fire the most enjoyable?

    Maybe it's because of Susannah Cahalan's expertise in writing or Heather Henderson's wonderful narration style, whatever the reason, this audio book was amazing. This book opened my eyes to new worlds for the mentally disabled. It allowed me to have hope for those who seem hopeless. My favorite aspect of this book was that Cahalan somehow managed to make me feel what she felt--Is she crazy? Will she make a 100% recovery? Will she have a reoccurrence of encephalitis?


    1 of 1 people found this review helpful
  •  
    Pamela BARRINGTON, RI, United States 03-07-13
    Pamela BARRINGTON, RI, United States 03-07-13 Member Since 2011
    HELPFUL VOTES
    5
    ratings
    REVIEWS
    23
    10
    FOLLOWERS
    FOLLOWING
    0
    3
    Overall
    Performance
    Story
    "A Bit Disappointing"
    Would you try another book from Susannah Cahalan and/or Heather Henderson?

    Heather Henderson did a fine job narrating. I would listen to another of her narrations. I'm not sure about Susannah Cahalan. It might depend on the topic.


    What do you think your next listen will be?

    I'm currently listening to My Beloved World by Sonia Sotomayor.


    Have you listened to any of Heather Henderson’s other performances before? How does this one compare?

    I have not listened to anything else by Heather.


    What reaction did this book spark in you? Anger, sadness, disappointment?

    Disappointment.


    Any additional comments?

    I was interested to read this book due to the fact that it deals with a medical mystery - and a psychiatric one at that. While the author's story is certainly scary and it really is a miracle that she was able to get a proper diagnosis and recover fully, the book was not as compelling as I had hoped. I can't really put my finger on why, but I did find my mind wandering quite often as I was listening to it. At times I felt that the story droned on and on a bit too much. Not a bad read, but don't expect to be on the edge of your seat. 2.5 stars - It was more than OK, but not quite GOOD.

    1 of 1 people found this review helpful
  • Showing: 1-10 of 26 results PREVIOUS123NEXT

Report Inappropriate Content

If you find this review inappropriate and think it should be removed from our site, let us know. This report will be reviewed by Audible and we will take appropriate action.

CANCEL

Thank You

Your report has been received. It will be reviewed by Audible and we will take appropriate action.