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Paperback The Delivery Room Book

ISBN: 1582434247

ISBN13: 9781582434247

The Delivery Room

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Book Overview

It is 1998. In the safe haven of her London office--a room her husband jokingly calls "The Delivery Room"--therapist Mira Braverman listens to the stories of her troubled patients, including an aristocratic woman going through an intense infertility drama, an American journalist who is eager to have a baby, and an irritable divorc? who likes to taunt Mira about her Serbian nationality. As the novel unfolds, Mira discovers she is not as distant from...

Customer Reviews

2 ratings

Fruit of the Womb

Mira is a Serbian psychotherapist, living in London, and, like many fictional (and real) shrinks, has a complicated family situation. Her husband, Peter, is dying of cancer; she has a stepson; her sister is married to her ex-boy friend. Her patients are brought in as characters. This simplifies the author's problems with plot construction, but diffuses interest for the reader. The unifying theme is people's attitudes to having children. One character has suffered a stillbirth, another is infertile, another's husband does not want a baby, and so forth. The time is in the late 1990's, with Srebnica and Kosovo going on, and the Serbs being the unpopular side in London. (Some Britishers did remember the three of Hitler's divisions that the Yugoslavs accounted for). There is a lot of interior monologue. It's very well done. In the case of Mira it's one of the best evocations of what goes on in a therapist's mind that I've read, but in the case of the other characters it becomes longwinded and makes the book too long. (The fifteenth and sixteenth chapters of Genesis come to mind. They dealt with fertility issues things differently then and got the story finished in four hundred words). Perhaps there is some reason for the author's vagueness about Mira's training and qualifications but I found it frustrating. Mira is evidently not medically qualified, and is not a psychoanalyst, although the Tavistock Clinic and Anna Freud and Melanie Klein and Winnicott are mentioned. Her patients are young, well-educated adults and are not severely ill by psychiatric standards. She sees them for an hour once or twice a week over a period of years, and is not employed by the National Health Service. Her technique is psychoanalytic, with a touch of Carl Rogers . She formulates the patients' root problems in her own mind, intuitively, listens to them free-associate, and then nudges them with "aha" and enigmatic questions to agree with her formulation and think they thought of it themselves. Looking back at what I've written I sound critical, but really this is a superb book. I enjoyed it and learned from it.

"There was nobody left uncut or unscarred."

Sylvia Brownrigg's "The Delivery Room" is set in London in 1998 and 1999, and focuses on Peter Braverman and his Serbian-born wife, Mira. Peter is a teacher and scholar who specializes in Russian literature, while Mira practices psychotherapy in their Camden Town flat. Peter calls Mira's office "the delivery room," and it is an apt description. In some ways, Mira's calm and soothing presence, along with her astute questioning, leads her patients to rediscover an inner strength that they thought was gone forever. At her best, Mira helps her clients to be psychologically reborn, with a renewed optimism that enables them to face their problems. Since some of Mira's patients are obsessed with the subject of children--having them, relating to them, and losing them--"the delivery room," as a title, has an added dimension. Brownrigg skillfully explores the troubles and traumas that can shake us to the core. Among them are infidelity, infertility, terminal illness, family dysfunction, war, prejudice, and loneliness. While Mira tries to connect with her clients (including the "Mourning Madonna" who is devastated after tragically losing her baby, "the Bigot," a "kettle or rage " who is bitter, sarcastic, and aggressive, and "the Aristocrat" a wealthy woman with a posh accent and a sense of entitlement), she is also dealing with serious personal problems. Mira may be in London, but her heart and mind are also in what is left of Yugoslavia, where her family struggles to survive the Balkan wars that have brought death and destruction to a formerly beautiful land. Mira is fortunate to have a husband she adores who is also very much in love with her after more than twenty years of marriage. Unfortunately, she is destined to encounter fierce personal challenges that will test her own emotional resilience. This is an intimate and deliberately paced book, with keen passages of dark humor, pitch-perfect dialogue, and lovely and precise descriptive writing. Brownrigg takes the time to compassionately investigate each character's inner life. She demonstrates that, although other people's problems may seem trivial or remote to us, to be truly human means to understand the universality of loss, pain, and sorrow. Mira has the gift of relating to those who feel broken. It is her wish to help them become whole, or at least to look to the future with something resembling hope. She wants the same thing for herself, and since her work enmeshes her in each client's "web of distress," she regularly forces herself to set aside her own concerns in order to focus on those who have come seeking wisdom and solace. "The Delivery Room" is an insightful and touching novel in which Sylvia Brownrigg sheds light on our hidden selves, enabling us to better understand the threads that bind us together and the obstacles that keep us apart.
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