"Madness is a necessary and unforgettable book. It is a particular story of a Jim Crow institution that devastated the lives of many suffering Black Americans, but it is also a collective story about how mental health care is a social justice issue, and a personal story about love, loss, and holding onto loved ones through the ravages of living. With powerful and vulnerable writing, alongside diligent research, Hylton has delivered an important and timely work."--Imani Perry, National Book Award winner and New York Times bestselling author of South to America
"Antonia Hylton expertly weaves together a moving personal narrative, in-depth reporting, and illuminating archival research to produce a book that left me breathless. Madness is a haunting and revelatory examination of the way that America's history of racism is deeply entangled in our mental health system. A profoundly important book that helps us make sense of an underexamined aspect of our country's history."--Clint Smith, New York Times bestselling author of Above Ground and How the Word is Passed
"Madness is a haunting history of Crownsville Hospital, a segregated asylum in Anne Arundel County, Maryland. Sweeping in its reach, the book--with its use of oral history and a rich archive--offers an astonishing account of the complex relation of race, racism, and mental healthcare in America. But there is something more intimate in these pages: a story about families, about the failures of our country, and about the madness that touches us all. A powerful read!"--Eddie S. Glaude, Jr., Princeton University professor and New York Times bestselling author of Begin Again
"Hylton's in-depth probing investigation of Crownsville's history answers essential questions about what happened to the Black population of mentally ill decades after Emancipation."--King Davis, PhD, Research Professor at the University of Texas at Austin School of Information
"Madness is a work of pure genius. Antonia Hylton breathtakingly joins archival persistence and keen insight to tell the story of lives lived and died at Crownsville, formerly Maryland's Hospital for the Negro Insane. With courage and tenacity, she uncovers forgotten narratives and past crimes - and in so doing deepens our understanding of how 'our traumas and illnesses are frequently intertwined with American history and the peculiar reality of being Black.' This beautiful, brave, heartbreaking, and urgently important work will change the ways you think about race, sanity, and community."--Jonathan Metzl, author of Dying of Whiteness
"Madness is an all-too-true story, tirelessly and comprehensively reported, of the reinstatement of antebellum conditions under the guise of mental-health treatment -- an asylum for so-called "feeble-minded" Blacks that was, in fact, little more than slavery by another name. Antonia Hylton's sensitive, searching account of the people forever changed by this place -- and its very clear, dreadful connection to today's carceral state -- will leave you dumbfounded."--Robert Kolker, author of the #1 New York Times bestseller, Hidden Valley Road
"Madness is a remarkable feat of reporting, penetrating centuries-old brick walls to reveal in vivid detail long buried truths about the racism at the heart of our nation's ongoing mental health crisis. Many books are described as urgent. This one actually is."--Wesley Lowery, Pulitzer Prize winning journalist and New York Times bestselling author of American Whitelash