- Marya Hornbacher
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Marya Hornbacher Born 4 April 1974
Walnut Creek, California, U.S.[1]Spouse(s) Julian Beard (1998-2002)
Jeff Miller (2002-Present) [2]
maryahornbacher.comMarya Justine Hornbacher (born 4 April 1974) is an American author and freelance journalist. Her book Wasted: A Memoir of Anorexia and Bulimia, is an autobiographical account of her struggle with eating disorders, written when she was twenty-two. It has been translated into fourteen languages and sold over a million copies in the U.S. Wasted was banned in many public school systems due to its many drug and alcohol references as well as repeated sexual encounters. Her second book is the critically praised 2005 novel, The Center of Winter, which follows a family in the aftermath of a suicide. Her third book, published in April 2008, is a memoir called Madness: A Bipolar Life, written after she was diagnosed with bipolar disorder. (ISBN 978-0618754458)
Contents
Biography
Marya Hornbacher was born in Walnut Creek, California and raised in Edina, Minnesota. She is the only child of Jay and Judy Hornbacher, professional theatre actors and directors; her mother worked as a school administrator before converting to theatre. She became bulimic at age nine and developed drug and alcohol problems by age thirteen. When Hornbacher was fifteen years old, she was accepted into the prestigious arts boarding school Interlochen where she developed anorexia.
The summer following her first year at Interlochen she was hospitalized for her eating disorder and then moved in with her father's ex-wife in Northern California. While there, she met her future husband, Julian Daniel Beard, but her eating disorder steadily worsened and she was re-hospitalized after Christmas. She was released in February but readmitted again after only two weeks. Eventually her parents sent her to Lowe House, a residential treatment hospital for adolescents with severe, long-term mental problems.
After her release that summer, she enrolled in the University of Minnesota and started writing for the university's student newspaper The Minnesota Daily. At the age of eighteen, despite her continued eating disorder, she signed out of treatment. In the fall of 1992, she entered college at American University in Washington D.C. Her eating disorder rapidly worsened and by the winter she had dropped to fifty-two pounds. On a visit home to her parents, she was admitted to the ER and given one week to live.
Though Hornbacher survived her ordeal, she has been left with many physical ailments as a result, including osteoporosis, a heart murmur, and infertility. Her second autobiography, Madness, also describes a near fatal incident of cutting but Hornbacher herself seems unclear about whether or not this was an intentional attempt at suicide.
Personal life
Hornbacher married Beard in 1996, but they divorced after the success of Wasted. The marriage, and eventual divorce, is also discussed in Madness where she attributes the nuptial failure in part to problems with drugs and alcohol, and largely to her ill-managed bi-polar disorder.
Marya received a Master's Degree from the New College of California. Her second book, The Center of Winter, published in 2005, received excellent reviews, and her second memoir, Madness: A Bipolar Life, was published in 2008. Her most recent book, Sane: Mental Illness, Addiction, and the 12 Steps, was published in 2010.
She has now been sober for over five years and lives in Minneapolis with her husband Jeff Miller.[3] Hornbacher writes full-time, working at her home in Minneapolis. She was recently honored with a major award for music journalism, for her profile of jazz great Oscar Peterson. She still publishes occasional journalistic pieces, as well as short fiction and poetry.
References
- ^ Wasted: A Memoir of Anorexia and Bulimia
- ^ Madness: A Bipolar Life
- ^ "Bio". Maryahornbacher.com. http://www.maryahornbacher.com/about.htm. Retrieved 2011-01-02.
External links
Categories:- People with bipolar disorder
- University of Minnesota alumni
- American University alumni
- American journalists
- 1974 births
- Living people
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