Marie Brown and Marilyn Charles have assembled a book that bridges different perspectives and disciplines to contextualize and complicate womens experiences of psychosis through culture, the body, spirituality, and psychiatry. Reading Women and Psychosis itself becomes a polyphonic experience that changes how we understand what psychosis is, how it has been construed, and for women, with what consequences. -- Annie Rogers, Hampshire College Not since Phyllis Cheslers Women and Madness has there been a book that focuses on the important topic of psychosis in women. Kudos to Brown and Charles on this timely and welcomed collection of insightful essays, which I strongly recommend to all who are interested in learning more about the causes, manifestations, misunderstandings, and treatment of psychosis in women. -- Danielle Knafo, Long Island University Post "Women & Psychosis offers an inspiring example of how lived experience, clinical insight, and critical theory can be woven together to illuminate a complex set of psychological issues. By challenging monolithic thinking about madness whether by psychiatrists, patients, or feminist scholars the authors are able to explore a much greater diversity of women's experiences. A major contribution! -- Gail A. Hornstein, Mount Holyoke College and author of Agnes's Jacket: A Psychologist's Search for the Meanings of Madness