The Bishop, the Hunchback, & the Lunatic: The Autobiography of a Mad-Doctor by an Apostate Son of a Baptist While Western Civilization as We Know It H

The Bishop, the Hunchback, & the Lunatic: The Autobiography of a Mad-Doctor by an Apostate Son of a Baptist While Western Civilization as We Know It H

by Philip McIlnay
     
 

A true story...

When God tells a psychologist he must run for president to prevent the murder of millions of patients and save Western Civilization As We Know It, he writes this book as his campaign autobiography. The psychologist is a political liberal, and a theological skeptic who does not believe in God, but they talk. The only catch is the doctor is locked up

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Overview

A true story...

When God tells a psychologist he must run for president to prevent the murder of millions of patients and save Western Civilization As We Know It, he writes this book as his campaign autobiography. The psychologist is a political liberal, and a theological skeptic who does not believe in God, but they talk. The only catch is the doctor is locked up in his own mental hospital, diagnosed with mania and psychosis.

In the lunatic asylum, the Mad-Doctor lives with fellow inmates Wild Bill (Buckley) and Lady Bird (Johnson). His closest confidants are George Berkeley (the Bishop), Soren Kierkegaard (the Hunchback), and the likes of Kant, Hume, Voltaire, Dorothy Parker, Mahalia Jackson, and Martin Luther. Asylum visitors include Descartes, Abelard, Aristotle, Plato, Elmer Gantry, and Ambrose Bierce. Among others, communications are received from Winston Churchill, Dr. Thomas More, William Jennings Bryan, Mark Twain, Aaron Burr, Michael Servetus, Eleanor of Aquitaine, and the prophet Ezekiel.

One of Mad-Doc's six ex-wives, the mother of his children, volunteers to lead his escape team from the asylum, where he's being held as a political prisoner. Elvis Presley and Wilt Chamberlain are his wingmen. Talking regularly with God, he will learn answers to the major questions that have plagued theologians throughout history. He will eventually benefit from the tutelage of Jerry Lee Lewis, and go steady with Janis Joplin.

By turns, comic and irreverent, poignant and affectionate, this memoir takes us inside the author's mind to show manic-depression and psychosis happening in real time. Along this wild ride, the writer authoritatively enlightens and entertains audiences on the subjects of mental illness, health care, politics, philosophy, and religion.

The Mad-Doctor spares no one, least of all himself, as he skewers liberal and conservative, believer and non-believer, alike. The author understands that health care economics are at the heart of this country's future well-being. And he recognizes that regardless of whether Democratic or Republican Party reform plans carry the day, health care in America is headed for the crapper. While there is still time to pull back from the brink, Mad-Doc can begin a run for president as an authentic bipolar candidate committed to healing a nation in which the center did not hold. He is also in a unique position to bridge religious divides as the son of a Baptist minister who can claim, "Some of my best wives have been Catholics-and don't forget the Episcopalian, Mormon, and Church of the Brethren girls."

In a tone reminiscent of Hunter S. Thompson and Walker Percy, The Bishop, The Hunchback, And The Lunatic: The Autobiography of a Mad-Doctor By an Apostate Son of a Baptist While Western Civilization As We Know It Hangs in the Balance is a brilliant satire full of remarkable candor and ribald humor.

Philip McIlnay holds a PhD in clinical psychology, MA in political science, and BA in philosophy. He is a former think-tanker, management consultant, deputy superintendent of Ann Arbor Public Schools, and Peace Corps volunteer. Dr. McIlnay is board-certified in psychopharmacology, child and adolescent psychology, serious mental illness, and forensic psychology. He specializes in depression, manic-depression, psychosis, dissociative identity, chemical dependency, and post-traumatic stress disorder. He's been a clinical director, a doctor, and a patient in mental hospitals. He currently has a psychotherapy practice in Los Angeles.

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Editorial Reviews

Kirkus Reviews
In his memoir, a clinical psychologist attempts to explain that God has chosen him to become president of the United States to stop a health insurance conspiracy from killing millions. McIlnay has written an entirely unconventional autobiography. He says that he was a board-certified psychologist and was previously the director of the mental institution from which he has written his memoir--as a patient. Comparing himself to the prophet Daniel, McIlnay believes that God has revealed to him the "Handwriting-on-the-Wall" that FUCU Inc., a fictitious multinational health insurance corporation with a government-sanctioned monopoly, has begun implementing a plan to maximize profits by assassinating its sickest patients, classified as "loss-units." Ironically, his knowledge of this nefarious plot has caused FUCU to commit McIlnay in his own institution, or so he believes. But he will not be suppressed so easily. Believing in his God-given mission, he has written his autobiography as a step in his path to the presidency, which he is confident is the only way that he will be able to expose and prevent FUCU's diabolical plan and save "Western Civilization As We Know It." Raised in a religious household (his father was a Baptist minister), McIlnay grew up a faithful Christian, but his inquisitive, intellectually curious nature drew him to philosophy, particularly skepticism. For instance, as a university student, McIlnay challenged orthodox Christianity and the right to a free press as publisher of a subversive magazine, which led to his expulsion. It's this experience that typifies most of McIlnay's recollections. He is a classic example of an iconoclast--beholden to nothing except his search for the Truth. The most valuable chapters are those in which he fondly recalls his discovery of great minds and ideas while a student, and his reverence for the liberal arts is refreshing in a time that so prizes analytics. But, while McIlnay is visited by and capably converses with his favorite dead philosophers (Kierkegaard, Kant, Hume, Berkeley, etc.), there is ultimately a tediousness and redundancy to many of his anecdotes. The ravings are lucid, but unsound.

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Product Details

ISBN-13:
9781479195664
Publisher:
CreateSpace Publishing
Publication date:
02/12/2013
Pages:
508
Product dimensions:
6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 1.13(d)

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