A person holding a blue postcard with handwritten address and message, beside a book titled 'The Origin of Consciousness in the Breakdown of the Bicameral Mind' by Julian Jaynes. The postcard has a United States stamp with the word "FREEDOM" on it, and the background shows green foliage.
A handwritten note on a black card held by a person against a window with a green leafy background. The note discusses themes of suicide, mental health, and personal struggle, mentioning a writer who won a National Magazine Award for reporting on elderly suicide.

Hey, you are not Anne Fadiman…

But did you know about her published work:

Her first book, "The Spirit Catches You and You Fall Down," is an account of the unbridgeable gulf between a family of Hmong refugees and their American doctors. It won the National Book Critics Circle Award for Nonfiction, among other awards. Fadiman is also the author of two essay collections. The London Observer called "Ex Libris" "witty, enchanting, and supremely well-written." NPR said of "At Large and At Small," "Fadiman is utterly delightful, witty and curious, and she's such a stellar writer that if she wrote about pencil shavings, you'd read it aloud to all your friends."