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Cover of Ferment: a memoir of mental illness, redemption, and winemaking in the Mosel

Ferment: a memoir of mental illness, redemption, and winemaking in the Mosel

✍ Scribed by Patrick Dobson


Publisher
Skyhorse Publishing
Year
2020
Tongue
English
Weight
178 KB
Category
Fiction
City
Germany;Trier;Trier (Germany)
ISBN
1510757317

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

✦ Synopsis


Adeeply moving accountofone man’s return to the German town where he first pursued a career in winemaking, and his attempt to reckon with the mental illness, alcoholism, and enduring relationships that defined the most formative chapter of his life.

After an attempted suicide by hangingβ€”with his son in the next roomβ€”author Patrick Dobson checks into a mental hospital, clueless, reeling from bone-crushing depression and tortuous, racing thoughts. A long overdue diagnosis of manic depression offers relief but brings his confused and eventful past into question.

To make sense of his suicide attempt and deal with his past, he returns to Germany where, three decades earlier, he arrived as twenty-two-year-oldβ€”lost, drunk, and in the throes of untreated mental illnessβ€”in search of a new life and with dreams of becoming a winemaker. The sublime Mosel vineyards and the ancient city of Trier changed his life forever.

Ferment charts his days in Trier’s vineyards and cellars, and the enduring friendships that would define his life. A winemaker and his wife become like parents to him. In their son, he finds a brother, whose death years later sends Dobson into a suicidal tailspin. His friends, once apprentices like himself, become leaders in their fields: an art historian and church-restoration expert, an art- and architectural-glass craftsman, a painter and photographer, and a theologian/journalist. The relationships he builds with them become hallmarks of a life well-lived.

InFerment, Dobson reconnects with the people who stood by him through his dissolution and eventual recovery. In these relationships, he seeks who he was and how his time in Germany changed him. He peers into his memory to understand how manic depression and alcoholism affected who he was then and how his time in Germany made him who he’s become.


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