cover image Cracked, Not Broken: 
Surviving and Thriving 
After a Suicide Attempt

Cracked, Not Broken: Surviving and Thriving After a Suicide Attempt

Kevin Hines, foreword by Dr. Daniel J. Reidenberg. Rowman & Littlefield, $29.95 (194p) ISBN 978-1-4422-2240-3

At age 19, Hines nearly became one of the more than 2,000 people who have jumped to their deaths from the Golden Gate Bridge since it was built in 1937. Fortunately, however, Hines become part of a much better statistic: he is the 26th person known to have survived the 220-foot fall. The first-time author also found a reason for living after years of suffering without help from “bipolar disorder 1 with psychotic features.” Now a well-known mental-health advocate, Hines presents a vivid and moving memoir of how he descended into mental breakdown, fought to overcome his demons with the help of family and medical experts, and has made it his “life’s work to educate people all over this great country, and around the globe, to prevent suicide and understand mental illness.” Hines doesn’t go easy on the reader—he harrowingly describes his extreme paranoia, deep depressions, manic highs, hallucinations, and panic attacks. But he delivers a heartfelt message to other people who have undergone—or are undergoing—similar mental-health problems: “always find hope, a future, and the epic beauty in life.” Agent: Dana Newman, Dana Newman Literary. (Aug.)