Snappy newsletters. Simple Facebook sharing. Spirited comments. Sweet features are waiting… GET THEM NOW!

Philip Roth: I Did Not 'Crack Up'

Novelist refutes magazine, says it was a bad reaction to sleeping pill

By Matt Cantor,  Newser Staff

Posted May 24, 2012 2:09 PM CDT

(Newser) – Philip Roth isn't happy with the Atlantic: A recent piece in the magazine said he suffered from "a 'crack-up' in his mid-50s," and the novelist says that's simply "not true." The Atlantic Wire points out that the episode, "whatever you call it," has been widely discussed in past articles and interviews, but the novelist rejects the term "crack-up." The truth, says Roth, is that he suffered an "adverse reaction" to a sleeping pill called Halcion in the 1980s.

Roth wrote a letter to the magazine about the "unfortunate biographical error." Halcion can bring on a condition known as "Halcion madness," Roth writes, and indeed it had already been banned in some countries when Roth received a prescription after surgery. The drug can bring on "symptoms like amnesia, paranoia, depression, and hallucinations," Roth notes, citing an old New York Times article. His own reaction to the pill "ended promptly" when he stopped taking it.

Novelist Philip Roth sits inside a screened tent at his home on Sept. 5, 2005, in Warren, Conn.
Novelist Philip Roth sits inside a screened tent at his home on Sept. 5, 2005, in Warren, Conn.   (AP Photo/Douglas Healey)
« Prev« Prev | Next »Next » Slideshow
My TakeCLICK BELOW TO VOTE
8%
35%
0%
4%
8%
44%
To report an error on this story, notify our editors.
COMMENTS
Be the first to comment on this story.
 

NEWS FROM OUR PARTNERS
Other Sites We Like:   24/7 Wall St.   |   BuzzFeed   |   Cracked   |   Timelines   |   POPSUGAR Tech   |   Business Insider   |   HuffPost Entertainment   |   NewsOne