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Mayhem

A Memoir

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
A searingly powerful memoir about the impact of addiction on a family. 
In the summer of 2012 a woman named Eva was found dead in the London townhouse she shared with her husband, Hans K. Rausing. The couple had struggled with drug addiction for years, often under the glare of tabloid headlines. Now, writing with singular clarity and restraint, Hans’ sister, the editor and publisher Sigrid Rausing, tries to make sense of what happened.
     In Mayhem, she asks the difficult questions those close to the world of addiction must face. “Who can help the addict, consumed by a shaming hunger, a need beyond control? There is no medicine: the drugs are the medicine. And who can help their families, so implicated in the self-destruction of the addict? Who can help when the very notion of ‘help’ becomes synonymous with an exercise of power; a familial police state; an end to freedom, in the addict’s mind?”
     An eloquent and timely attempt to understand the conundrum of addiction—and a memoir as devastating as it is riveting.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      August 14, 2017
      Granta magazine publisher Rausing (Everything Is Wonderful: Memories of a Collective Farm in Estonia and History, Memory, and Identity in Post-Soviet Estonia) recounts the lives of her brother Hans and her sister-in-law Eva, who were addicted to drugs, in this intimate and compassionate memoir. Rausing is the granddaughter of the founder of Swedish company Tetra Pak, a food-packaging manufacturer. Tetra Pak brought her family great wealth and fame. Her brother Hans, the family heir to Tetra Pak, and his wife Eva cycled in and out of rehabs, relapsing after several years of sobriety. In 2012 Eva’s body was found decomposing in her and Hans’s bedroom. Rausing explores this tragedy with grace, humility, and razor-sharp insight. Throughout, she attempts to better understand the fierce compulsions of addiction. After Eva’s death, Rausing’s family was the subject of relentless Swedish tabloid coverage. Rausing concludes, “ implies guilt, which is appropriate in this context, since there is no addict story that doesn’t revolve around guilt, shame and judgment.” Her writing is rich with humble wisdom. Agent: Andrew Wylie, Wylie Agency.

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  • English

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