<p><em>If Fellini met Kafka the comical with the dark side of the absurd . . .</em></p><p>Sine a professor of creative writing accompanies Sam a neuroscientist on a conference trip to a Hotel Castle. Sam wants to present a new device the monitor. Sine wants to recover from the months of tending to her mother who just passed away. When they arrive at the hotel Sine is in a dreamlike state . . .</p><p>With refined narrative mastery and extraordinary depth in exploring the unconscious Cordelia Schmidt-Hellerau confirms herself in this book as a writer of the highest caliber: the protagonists of the story move in a fluctuating dreamlike dimension between synchronicity and diachronicity and page after page they become more real than real just as in dreams. The tale weaves thread upon thread an initially enigmatic and puzzling tapestry which gradually resolves into a picture of intense humanity where awe sorrow resentment sweetness and gratitude find their proper place in the narrator's heart.&nbsp;For the reader a moving experience of recognizing the complexities of life and affection without discounting or self-deception in a story dreamed and told with an unmistakable personal style.</p><p><em>-Stefano Bolognini MD&nbsp;</em>IPA Past President</p><p><em>Memento</em>&nbsp;is a poignant story of life loss tragedy aging death and birth. The main character Sine and her internal world and life are vividly captured through the images evoked within the reader with beautiful language. One is brought forwards and backwards within this personal world of Sine her relationships to herself and others and the loss and reappearance of them in many forms that populate her mind. As a psychoanalyst and novelist Cordelia Schmidt-Hellerau brings the reader into the world of Lewis Carroll's&nbsp;<em>Alice in Wonderland</em> or Kurt Vonnegut's&nbsp;<em>Slaughterhouse Five</em> where nothing makes sense things are absurd timeless and confused - and yet one can understand. This book is a journey through the labyrinth of the dream world and mind of the narrator and her characters.</p><p><em>-Abbot A. Bronstein Ph.D.&nbsp;</em>Psychoanalyst Writer and Associate Editor<em>&nbsp;International Journal of Psychoanalysis</em></p><p><em>&nbsp;</em>Cordelia Schmidt-Hellerau's&nbsp;<em>Memento</em>&nbsp;is a restorative haunted Odyssey into memory dreams and loss fulfilling Freud's observation in -<em>Creative Writers and Day-Dreaming</em>: Past present and future are threaded . . . on the string of the wish that runs through them.</p><p>-Ellen Pinsky PsyD author of&nbsp;<em>Death and Fallibility in the Psychoanalytic Encounter: Mortal Gifts.</em></p>
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