Jonathan Rosen is an American author, essayist, and editor known for his work at the intersection of literature, faith, and science. His memoir The Best Minds recounts his friendship with Michael Laudor, a Yale Law graduate whose struggle with schizophrenia ended in tragedy. The book is both a personal reflection and a critique of the U.S. mental health system. Rosen’s earlier works include The Talmud and the Internet and Joy Comes in the Morning. His writing combines intellectual inquiry with lyrical prose, exploring how belief systems—religious, scientific, or personal—shape our understanding of identity, sanity, and community.
A deeply personal memoir and cultural history, The Best Minds recounts Jonathan Rosen’s friendship with Michael Laudor, a brilliant Yale Law student whose promising future was shattered by schizophrenia. After a tragic murder committed during a psychotic break, Rosen confronts the failures of mental health care, societal stigma, and his own illusions. Blending biography, reportage, and philosophical inquiry, the book probes the tension between genius and madness, and the ethical limits of storytelling. The Best Minds is a haunting, compassionate examination of ambition, mental illness, and the tragic costs of a system that abandons its most vulnerable.