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It was with some trepidation that I opened Edward Shorter's new book, A History of Psychiatry, fearing that I would find a tedious and turgid tome. But no. Here is a crisp, feisty account that never loses momentum, is frequently entertaining, yet is always meticulously researched. Shorter pulls no punches as he takes us through the triumphs and catastrophes, treatments brilliant and bizarre, that have punctuated psychiatry over the past 200 years. There was hydrotherapy, the rest cure, the transorbital lobotomy, and the "Georgia Power Cocktail" (a form of punitive electroconvulsive therapy prescribed at the 10,000-bed Georgia State Sanatorium, a
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