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Million Little Pieces, Paperback by Frey, James, Brand New

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Item specifics

Condition
Brand new: A new, unread, unused book in perfect condition with no missing or damaged pages. See the ...
ISBN
9780307276902
Book Title
Million Little Pieces
Item Length
8in
Publisher
Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group
Publication Year
2005
Format
Trade Paperback
Language
English
Item Height
0.9in
Author
James Frey
Genre
Self-Help, Biography & Autobiography, Social Science
Topic
Substance Abuse & Addictions / Drugs, Personal Memoirs, Disease & Health Issues, Twelve-Step Programs
Item Width
5.1in
Item Weight
11.2 Oz
Number of Pages
448 Pages

About this product

Product Information

NATIONAL BESTSELLER * A gripping memoir about the nature of addiction and the meaning of recovery from a bold and talented literary voice. "Anyone who has ever felt broken and wished for a better life will find inspiration in Frey's story." -- People "A great story.... You can't help but cheer his victory." -- Los Angeles Times Book Review By the time he entered a drug and alcohol treatment facility, James Frey had taken his addictions to near-deadly extremes. He had so thoroughly ravaged his body that the facility's doctors were shocked he was still alive. The ensuing torments of detoxification and withdrawal, and the never-ending urge to use chemicals, are captured with a vitality and directness that recalls the seminal eye-opening power of William Burroughs's Junky. But A Million Little Pieces refuses to fit any mold of drug literature. Inside the clinic, James is surrounded by patients as troubled as he is--including a judge, a mobster, a one-time world-champion boxer, and a fragile former prostitute to whom he is not allowed to speak--but their friendship and advice strikes James as stronger and truer than the clinic's droning dogma of How to Recover. James refuses to consider himself a victim of anything but his own bad decisions, and insists on accepting sole accountability for the person he has been and the person he may become--which runs directly counter to his counselors' recipes for recovery. James has to fight to find his own way to confront the consequences of the life he has lived so far, and to determine what future, if any, he holds. It is this fight, told with the charismatic energy and power of One Flew over the Cuckoo's Nest, that is at the heart of A Million Little Pieces: the fight between one young man's will and the ever-tempting chemical trip to oblivion, the fight to survive on his own terms, for reasons close to his own heart. "

Product Identifiers

Publisher
Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group
ISBN-10
0307276902
ISBN-13
9780307276902
eBay Product ID (ePID)
48655309

Product Key Features

Book Title
Million Little Pieces
Author
James Frey
Format
Trade Paperback
Language
English
Topic
Substance Abuse & Addictions / Drugs, Personal Memoirs, Disease & Health Issues, Twelve-Step Programs
Publication Year
2005
Genre
Self-Help, Biography & Autobiography, Social Science
Number of Pages
448 Pages

Dimensions

Item Length
8in
Item Height
0.9in
Item Width
5.1in
Item Weight
11.2 Oz

Additional Product Features

Reviews
"From the get-go, [Frey's] book sets itself a part, its narrative unspooling in short, unindented paragraphs and barely punctuated sentences whose spare, deadpan language belies the horror of what he's describing a meltdown dispatched in telegrams." -The New York Times Book Review "One of the best stories of transformation I've ever read. . . . Anyone who has ever felt broken and wished for a better life will find inspiration in Frey's story. This won't be the last we'll hear of him." -People "A ripping, gripping read. It's a staggeringly sober book whose stylistic tics are well-suited to its subject matter, and a finger in the eye of the culture of complaint . . . Engrossing." -Philadelphia Inquirer "A frenzied, electrifying description of the experience." The New Yorker "We finishA Million Little Pieceslike miners lifted out of a collapsed shaft: exhausted, blackened, oxygen-starved, but alive, thrillingly, amazingly alive."Minneapolis Star-Tribune "One of the most compelling books of the year… Incredibly bold…Somehow accomplishes what three decades' worth of cheesy public service announcements and after-school specials have failed to do: depict hard-core drug addiction as the self-inflicted apocalypse that it is." The New York Post "Thoroughly engrossing . . . Hard-bitten existentialism bristles on every page . . . Frey's prose is muscular and tough, ideal for conveying extreme physical anguish and steely determination."Entertainment Weekly "Incredible… Mesmerizing…Heart-rending." Atlanta Journal-Constitution "A rising literary star… has birthed a poetic account of his recovery. [A Million Little Piecesis] stark… disturbing… rife with raw emotion..." Chicago Sun-Times "Frey will probably be hailed in turn as the voice of a generation." Elle Magazine "We can admire Frey for his fierceness, his extremity, his solitary virtue, the angry ethics of his barroom tribe, and his victory over his furies… A compelling book." New York Magazine "An intimate, vivid and heartfelt memoir. Can Frey be the greatest writer of his generation? Maybe." New York Press "Incredible… A ferociously compelling memoir."Cleveland Plain Dealer "Insistent as it is demanding… A story that cuts to the nerve of addiction by clank-clank-clanking through the skull of the addicted… A critical milestone in modern literature." Orlando Weekly "At once devastatingly bleak and heartbreakingly hopeful. . . . Frey somehow manages to make his step-by-step walk through recovery compelling." Charlotte Observer "A stark, direct and graphic documentation of the rehabilitation process . . . The strength of the book comes from the truth of the experience." The Oregonian "A virtual addiction itself, viscerally affecting . . . Compulsively readable." City Paper(Washington, DC) "Powerful . . . haunting . . . addictive . . . A beautiful story of recovery and reconciliation." Iowa City Press-Citizen "An exhilarating read . . . Frey's intense, punc, "From the get-go, [Frey's] book sets itself a part, its narrative unspooling in short, unindented paragraphs and barely punctuated sentences whose spare, deadpan language belies the horror of what he's describing a meltdown dispatched in telegrams." - The New York Times Book Review "One of the best stories of transformation I've ever read. . . . Anyone who has ever felt broken and wished for a better life will find inspiration in Frey's story. This won't be the last we'll hear of him." - People "A ripping, gripping read. It's a staggeringly sober book whose stylistic tics are well-suited to its subject matter, and a finger in the eye of the culture of complaint . . . Engrossing." - Philadelphia Inquirer "A frenzied, electrifying description of the experience." The New Yorker "We finish A Million Little Pieces like miners lifted out of a collapsed shaft: exhausted, blackened, oxygen-starved, but alive, thrillingly, amazingly alive." Minneapolis Star-Tribune "One of the most compelling books of the year… Incredibly bold…Somehow accomplishes what three decades' worth of cheesy public service announcements and after-school specials have failed to do: depict hard-core drug addiction as the self-inflicted apocalypse that it is." The New York Post "Thoroughly engrossing . . . Hard-bitten existentialism bristles on every page . . . Frey's prose is muscular and tough, ideal for conveying extreme physical anguish and steely determination." Entertainment Weekly "Incredible… Mesmerizing…Heart-rending." Atlanta Journal-Constitution "A rising literary star… has birthed a poetic account of his recovery. [ A Million Little Pieces is] stark… disturbing… rife with raw emotion..." Chicago Sun-Times "Frey will probably be hailed in turn as the voice of a generation." Elle Magazine "We can admire Frey for his fierceness, his extremity, his solitary virtue, the angry ethics of his barroom tribe, and his victory over his furies… A compelling book." New York Magazine "An intimate, vivid and heartfelt memoir. Can Frey be the greatest writer of his generation? Maybe." New York Press "Incredible… A ferociously compelling memoir." Cleveland Plain Dealer "Insistent as it is demanding… A story that cuts to the nerve of addiction by clank-clank-clanking through the skull of the addicted… A critical milestone in modern literature." Orlando Weekly "At once devastatingly bleak and heartbreakingly hopeful. . . . Frey somehow manages to make his step-by-step walk through recovery compelling." Charlotte Observer "A stark, direct and graphic documentation of the rehabilitation process . . . The strength of the book comes from the truth of the experience." The Oregonian "A virtual addiction itself, viscerally affecting . . . Compulsively readable." City Paper (Washington, DC)"Powerful . . . haunting . . . addictive . . . A beautiful story of recovery and reconciliation." Iowa City Press-Citizen "An exhilarating read . . . Frey's intense, punchy prose renders his experiences with electrifying immediacy." Time Out New York "Describes the hopelessness and the inability to stop with precision . . . As anyone who has ever spent time in a rehab can testify, . . . he gets that down too." St. Louis Post-Dispatch "Frey comes on like the world's first recovering-addict hero. . . . [His] criticism of the twelve-step philosophy is provocative and his story undeniably compelling." GQ "[A] gruesomely absorbing account, told in stripped-down, staccato prose." Details "Frey has devised a rolling, pulsating style that really moves . . . undeniably striking. . . . A fierce and honorable work that refuses to glamorize [the] author's addiction or his thorny personality. . . . A book that makes other recovery memoirs look, well, a little pussy-ass." Salon, " From the get-go, [Frey' s] book sets itself a part, its narrative unspooling in short, unindented paragraphs and barely punctuated sentences whose spare, deadpan language belies the horror of what he's describing - a meltdown dispatched in telegrams." -- "The New York Times Book Review" " One of the best stories of transformation I've ever read. . . . Anyone who has ever felt broken and wished for a better life will find inspiration in Frey's story. This won't be the last we'll hear of him." -- "People" " A ripping, gripping read. It's a staggeringly sober book whose stylistic tics are well-suited to its subject matter, and a finger in the eye of the culture of complaint . . . Engrossing." -- "Philadelphia Inquirer" " A frenzied, electrifying description of the experience." - "The New Yorker" " We finish A Million Little Pieces like miners lifted out of a collapsed shaft: exhausted, blackened, oxygen-starved, but alive, thrillingly, amazingly alive." "- Minneapolis Star-Tribune" " One of the most compelling books of the year... Incredibly bold... Somehow accomplishes what three decades' worth of cheesy public service announcements and after-school specials have failed to do: depict hard-core drug addiction as the self-inflicted apocalypse that it is." - "The New York Post" " Thoroughly engrossing . . . Hard-bitten existentialism bristles on every page . . . Frey's prose is muscular and tough, ideal for conveying extreme physical anguish and steely determination." " - Entertainment Weekly" " Incredible... Mesmerizing... Heart-rending." - "Atlanta Journal-Constitution" " A rising literary star... has birthed a poetic account of his recovery. [A Million Little Pieces is] stark... disturbing... rife with raw emotion..." - "Chicago Sun-Times" " Frey will probably be hailed in turn as the voice of a generation." - "Elle Magazine" " We can admire Frey for his fierceness, his extremity, his solitary virtue, the angry ethics of his barroom tribe, and his victory over his furies... A compelling book." - "New York Magazine" " An intimate, vivid and heartfelt memoir. Can Frey be the greatest writer of his generation? Maybe." - "New York Press" " Incredible... A ferociously compelling memoir." "- Cleveland Plain Dealer" " Insistent as it is demanding... A story that cuts to the nerve of addiction by clank-clank-clanking through the skull of the addicted... A critical milestone in modern literature." - "Orlando Weekly" " At once devastatingly bleak and heartbreakingly hopeful. . . . Frey somehow manages to make his step-by-step walk through recovery compelling." - "Charlotte Observer" " A stark, direct and graphic documentation of the rehabilitation process . . . The strength of the book comes from the truth of the experience." - "The Oregonian" " A virtual addiction itself, viscerally affecting . . . Compulsively readable." - "City Paper" (Washington, DC) " Powerful . . . haunting . . . addictive . . . A beautiful story of recovery andreconciliation." - "Iowa City Press-Citizen" " An exhilarating read . . . Frey's intense, punchy prose renders his experiences with electrifying immediacy." - "Time Out New York" " Describes the hopelessness and the inability to stop with precision . . . As anyone who has ever spent time in a rehab can testify, . . . he gets that down too." - "St. Louis Post-Dispatch" " Frey comes on like the world's first recovering-addict hero. . . . [His] criticism of the twelve-step philosophy is provocative and his story undeniably compelling." - "GQ" " [A] gruesomely absorbing account, told in stripped-down, staccato prose." - "Details" " Frey has devised a rolling, pulsating style that really moves . . . undeniably striking. . . . A fierce and honorable work that refuses to glamorize [the] author's addiction or his thorny personality. . . . A book that makes other recovery memoirs look, well, a little pussy-ass." - "Salon", "Gripping.... A great story.... You can''t help but cheer his victory." - Los Angeles Times Book Review "James Frey''s staggering recovery memoir could well be seen as the final word on the topic." - San Francisco Chronicle "The most lacerating tale of drug addiction since William S. Burroughs''  Junky ." - The Boston Globe "Frey's book sets itself apart ... spare, deadpan language belies the horror of what he's describing - a meltdown dispatched in telegrams." - The New York Times Book Review "Anyone who has ever felt broken and wished for a better life will find inspiration in Frey's story." - People "Ripping, gripping.... It's a staggeringly sober book whose stylistic tics are well-suited to its subject matter, and a finger in the eye of the culture of complaint.... Engrossing." - Philadelphia Inquirer "A frenzied, electrifying description of the experience." -The New Yorker "We finish A Million Little Pieces like miners lifted out of a collapsed shaft: exhausted, blackened, oxygen-starved, but alive, thrillingly, amazingly alive." -Minneapolis Star-Tribune "One of the most compelling books of the year.... Incredibly bold.... Somehow accomplishes what three decades' worth of cheesy public service announcements and after-school specials have failed to do: depict hard-core drug addiction as the self-inflicted apocalypse that it is." -The New York Post "Thoroughly engrossing.... Hard-bitten existentialism bristles on every page.... Frey's prose is muscular and tough, ideal for conveying extreme physical anguish and steely determination." -Entertainment Weekly "Incredible.... Mesmerizing.... Heart-rending." -Atlanta Journal-Constitution "A rising literary star ... has birthed a poetic account of his recovery. [ A Million Little Pieces is] stark ... disturbing ... rife with raw emotion." -Chicago Sun-Times "Frey will probably be hailed in turn as the voice of a generation." -Elle "We can admire Frey for his fierceness, his extremity, his solitary virtue, the angry ethics of his barroom tribe, and his victory over his furies.... A compelling book." - New York "An intimate, vivid and heartfelt memoir. Can Frey be the greatest writer of his generation? Maybe." - New York Press "Incredible.... A ferociously compelling memoir." -The Plain Dealer "Insistent as it is demanding.... A story that cuts to the nerve of addiction by clank-clank-clanking through the skull of the addicted.... A critical milestone in modern literature." - Orlando Weekly "At once devastatingly bleak and heartbreakingly hopeful.... Frey somehow manages to make his step-by-step walk through recovery compelling." - Charlotte Observer "A stark, direct and graphic documentation of the rehabilitation process.... The strength of the book comes from the truth of the experience." -The Oregonian "A virtual addiction itself, viscerally affecting.... Compulsively readable." -City Paper (Washington, DC) "Powerful ... haunting ... addictive.... A beautiful story of recovery and reconciliation." -Iowa City Press-Citizen "An exhilarating read.... Frey's intense, punchy prose renders his experiences with electrifying immediacy." - Time Out New York "Describes the hopelessness and the inability to stop with precision.... As anyone who has ever spent time in a rehab can testify ... he gets that down too." -St. Louis Post-Dispatch "Frey comes on like the world's first recovering-addict hero.... [His] criticism of the twelve-step philosophy is provocative and his story undeniably compelling." - GQ "[A] gruesomely absorbing account, told in stripped-down, staccato prose." - Details "Frey has devised a rolling, pulsating style that really moves ... undeniably striking.... A fierce and honorable work that refuses to glamorize [the] author's addiction or his thorny personality.... A book that makes other recovery memoirs look, well, a little pussy-ass." -Salon, "From the get-go, ÝFrey's¨ book sets itself a part, its narrative unspooling in short, unindented paragraphs and barely punctuated sentences whose spare, deadpan language belies the horror of what he's describing - a meltdown dispatched in telegrams." --"The New York Times Book Review" "One of the best stories of transformation I've ever read. . . . Anyone who has ever felt broken and wished for a better life will find inspiration in Frey's story. This won't be the last we'll hear of him." --"People" "A ripping, gripping read. It's a staggeringly sober book whose stylistic tics are well-suited to its subject matter, and a finger in the eye of the culture of complaint . . . Engrossing." --"Philadelphia Inquirer" "A frenzied, electrifying description of the experience." -"The New Yorker" "We finish A Million Little Pieces like miners lifted out of a collapsed shaft: exhausted, blackened, oxygen-starved, but alive, thrillingly, amazingly alive." "-Minneapolis Star-Tribune" "One of the most compelling books of the year... Incredibly bold...Somehow accomplishes what three decades' worth of cheesy public service announcements and after-school specials have failed to do: depict hard-core drug addiction as the self-inflicted apocalypse that it is." -"The New York Post" "Thoroughly engrossing . . . Hard-bitten existentialism bristles on every page . . . Frey's prose is muscular and tough, ideal for conveying extreme physical anguish and steely determination."" -Entertainment Weekly" "Incredible... Mesmerizing...Heart-rending." -"Atlanta Journal-Constitution" "A rising literary star... has birthed a poetic account of his recovery. ÝA Million Little Pieces is¨stark... disturbing... rife with raw emotion..." -"Chicago Sun-Times" "Frey will probably be hailed in turn as the voice of a generation." -"Elle Magazine" "We can admire Frey for his fierceness, his extremity, his solitary virtue, the angry ethics of his barroom tribe, and his victory over his furies... A compelling book." -"New York Magazine" "An intimate, vivid and heartfelt memoir. Can Frey be the greatest writer of his generation? Maybe." -"New York Press" "Incredible... A ferociously compelling memoir." "-Cleveland Plain Dealer" "Insistent as it is demanding... A story that cuts to the nerve of addiction by clank-clank-clanking through the skull of the addicted... A critical milestone in modern literature." -"Orlando Weekly" "At once devastatingly bleak and heartbreakingly hopeful. . . . Frey somehow manages to make his step-by-step walk through recovery compelling." -"Charlotte Observer" "A stark, direct and graphic documentation of the rehabilitation process . . . The strength of the book comes from the truth of the experience." -"The Oregonian" "A virtual addiction itself, viscerally affecting . . . Compulsively readable." -"City Paper" (Washington, DC) "Powerful . . . haunting . . . addictive . . . A beautiful story of recovery and reconciliation." -"Iowa City Press-Citizen" "An exhilarating read . . . Frey's intense, punchy prose renders his experiences with electrifying immediacy." -"Time Out New York" "Describes the hopelessness and the inability to stop with precision . . . As anyone who has ever spent time in a rehab can testify, . . . he gets that down too." -"St. Louis Post-Dispatch" "Frey comes on like the world's firstrecovering-addict hero. . . . ÝHis¨ criticism of the twelve-step philosophy is provocative and his story undeniably compelling." -"GQ" "ÝA¨ gruesomely absorbing account, told in stripped-down, staccato prose." -"Details" "Frey has devised a rolling, pulsating style that really moves . . . undeniably striking. . . . A fierce and honorable work that refuses to glamorize Ýthe¨ author's addiction or his thorny personality. . . . A book that makes other recovery memoirs look, well, a little pussy-ass." -"Salon", "From the get-go, [Frey's] book sets itself a part, its narrative unspooling in short, unindented paragraphs and barely punctuated sentences whose spare, deadpan language belies the horror of what he's describing a meltdown dispatched in telegrams." -The New York Times Book Review "One of the best stories of transformation I've ever read. . . . Anyone who has ever felt broken and wished for a better life will find inspiration in Frey's story. This won't be the last we'll hear of him." -People "A ripping, gripping read. It's a staggeringly sober book whose stylistic tics are well-suited to its subject matter, and a finger in the eye of the culture of complaint . . . Engrossing." -Philadelphia Inquirer "A frenzied, electrifying description of the experience." The New Yorker "We finish A Million Little Pieces like miners lifted out of a collapsed shaft: exhausted, blackened, oxygen-starved, but alive, thrillingly, amazingly alive." Minneapolis Star-Tribune "One of the most compelling books of the year… Incredibly bold…Somehow accomplishes what three decades' worth of cheesy public service announcements and after-school specials have failed to do: depict hard-core drug addiction as the self-inflicted apocalypse that it is." The New York Post "Thoroughly engrossing . . . Hard-bitten existentialism bristles on every page . . . Frey's prose is muscular and tough, ideal for conveying extreme physical anguish and steely determination." Entertainment Weekly "Incredible… Mesmerizing…Heart-rending." Atlanta Journal-Constitution "A rising literary star… has birthed a poetic account of his recovery. [A Million Little Pieces is] stark… disturbing… rife with raw emotion..." Chicago Sun-Times "Frey will probably be hailed in turn as the voice of a generation." Elle Magazine "We can admire Frey for his fierceness, his extremity, his solitary virtue, the angry ethics of his barroom tribe, and his victory over his furies… A compelling book." New York Magazine "An intimate, vivid and heartfelt memoir. Can Frey be the greatest writer of his generation? Maybe." New York Press "Incredible… A ferociously compelling memoir." Cleveland Plain Dealer "Insistent as it is demanding… A story that cuts to the nerve of addiction by clank-clank-clanking through the skull of the addicted… A critical milestone in modern literature." Orlando Weekly "At once devastatingly bleak and heartbreakingly hopeful. . . . Frey somehow manages to make his step-by-step walk through recovery compelling." Charlotte Observer "A stark, direct and graphic documentation of the rehabilitation process . . . The strength of the book comes from the truth of the experience." The Oregonian "A virtual addiction itself, viscerally affecting . . . Compulsively readable." City Paper (Washington, DC) "Powerful . . . haunting . . . addictive . . . A beautiful story of recovery and reconciliation." Iowa City Press-Citizen "An exhilarating read . . . Frey's, "James Frey has written the War and Peace of addiction. It lends new meaning to the word 'harrowing' and one sometimes shudders to read it. But deep down, beneath all the layers and the masks, there lives something unconquerable in Frey's hurt spirit... And the writing, the writing, the writing." -Pat Conroy "A Million Little Pieces is as intense and perfectly detailed an account of a human quitting his drug and alcohol dependency as you are likely to read. And James Frey is horribly honest and funny in a young-guard Eggers and Wallace sort of way, but perhaps more contained and measured. He is unerring in his descent into a world where the characters need help in such extremely desperate ways. Read this immediately." Gus Van Sant "A Million Little Pieces is this generation's most comprehensive book about addiction: a heartbreaking memoir defined by its youthful tone and poetic honesty. Beneath the brutality of James Frey's painful process of growing up, there are simple gestures of kindness that will reduce even the most jaded to tears. Very few books earn those tears -- this one does. It will have you sobbing, laughing, angry, frustrated, and most importantly, hopeful. A Million Little Pieces is inspirational and essential. A remarkable performance." -Bret Easton Ellis, "From the get-go, [Frey's] book sets itself a part, its narrative unspooling in short, unindented paragraphs and barely punctuated sentences whose spare, deadpan language belies the horror of what he's describing - a meltdown dispatched in telegrams." --"The New York Times Book Review" "One of the best stories of transformation I've ever read. . . . Anyone who has ever felt broken and wished for a better life will find inspiration in Frey's story. This won't be the last we'll hear of him." --"People" "A ripping, gripping read. It's a staggeringly sober book whose stylistic tics are well-suited to its subject matter, and a finger in the eye of the culture of complaint . . . Engrossing." --"Philadelphia Inquirer" "A frenzied, electrifying description of the experience." -"The New Yorker" "We finish A Million Little Pieces like miners lifted out of a collapsed shaft: exhausted, blackened, oxygen-starved, but alive, thrillingly, amazingly alive." "-Minneapolis Star-Tribune" "One of the most compelling books of the year... Incredibly bold...Somehow accomplishes what three decades' worth of cheesy public service announcements and after-school specials have failed to do: depict hard-core drug addiction as the self-inflicted apocalypse that it is." -"The New York Post" "Thoroughly engrossing . . . Hard-bitten existentialism bristles on every page . . . Frey's prose is muscular and tough, ideal for conveying extreme physical anguish and steely determination."" -Entertainment Weekly" "Incredible... Mesmerizing...Heart-rending." -"Atlanta Journal-Constitution" "A rising literary star... has birthed a poetic account of his recovery. [A Million Little Pieces is]stark... disturbing... rife with raw emotion..." -"Chicago Sun-Times" "Frey will probably be hailed in turn as the voice of a generation." -"Elle Magazine" "We can admire Frey for his fierceness, his extremity, his solitary virtue, the angry ethics of his barroom tribe, and his victory over his furies... A compelling book." -"New York Magazine" "An intimate, vivid and heartfelt memoir. Can Frey be the greatest writer of his generation? Maybe." -"New York Press" "Incredible... A ferociously compelling memoir." "-Cleveland Plain Dealer" "Insistent as it is demanding... A story that cuts to the nerve of addiction by clank-clank-clanking through the skull of the addicted... A critical milestone in modern literature." -"Orlando Weekly" "At once devastatingly bleak and heartbreakingly hopeful. . . . Frey somehow manages to make his step-by-step walk through recovery compelling." -"Charlotte Observer" "A stark, direct and graphic documentation of the rehabilitation process . . . The strength of the book comes from the truth of the experience." -"The Oregonian" "A virtual addiction itself, viscerally affecting . . . Compulsively readable." -"City Paper" (Washington, DC) "Powerful . . . haunting . . . addictive . . . A beautiful story of recovery and reconciliation." -"Iowa City Press-Citizen" "An exhilarating read . . . Frey's intense, punchy prose renders his experiences with electrifying immediacy." -"Time Out New York" "Describes the hopelessness and the inability to stop with precision . . . As anyone who has ever spent time in a rehab can testify, . . . he gets that down too." -"St. Louis Post-Dispatch" "Frey comes on like the world's firstrecovering-addict hero. . . . [His] criticism of the twelve-step philosophy is provocative and his story undeniably compelling." -"GQ" "[A] gruesomely absorbing account, told in stripped-down, staccato prose." -"Details" "Frey has devised a rolling, pulsating style that really moves . . . undeniably striking. . . . A fierce and honorable work that refuses to glamorize [the] author's addiction or his thorny personality. . . . A book that makes other recovery memoirs look, well, a little pussy-ass." -"Salon"
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Dewey Decimal
362.29/092 B
Dewey Edition
21

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  • GREAT book (must NOT read it as a memoir!)

    [[UPDATE: Rating change from 5 stars to 4... I found this book to be very good, extremely great in many spots, but I was APPALED to hear that the best parts are in fact embellished stories and/or fabrications that are trying to be passed as reality. It was a good read, dramatic and powerful, but Frey should stick with telling the truth or at least not con people into believing the book is completely true! UNDERSTAND that if you do read the book (which I recommend) - go into with knowing that it is NOT, I repeat NOT, a memoir - Frey has admitted (live, on Oprah) that parts of the book were basically lies. I'd say read the book with the view that it is a great piece of fiction based on a true story - otherwise you'll be second guessing everything you read and it will ruin it for you (if it ...

  • Fact or Fiction- still a good read

    I read a Million Little Pieces without trying to discern whether or not it was truthful (if you haven't heard, James Frey has been attacked in the press recently, for exagerrating certain events.). Rather, I read it as a work of fiction. It is still worht reading, whether or not every fact lines up. The novel claims over and over "I am a drunk, and an addict and a criminal" - and spouts feelings of suicide, the author ends up having enoughself confidence to beat his addiction. He gives a deep insight into the addicted mind, a non-glorified glimpse into the chaotic misery that the addicted person suffers. In this meant-to-be-read-as-a-memoir account, James Frey tells the story of how he hit rock bottom, struggled through a rehab center and beat the odds when those around him following ...

  • A Million Little Pieces

    I knew prior to reading the book that the author had admitted to embelishing the facts. The fact is, however, that the author did go through treatment for drug and alcohol abuse, and his descriptions of the agony he endures in getting back to a somewhat normal life are vivid. It is worth reading for the message it sends about the evils of addiction. Whether one agrees or not with his conclusions, the author examines AA and its effectiveness as a rehabilitation program. His philosophy flies in the face of modern attempts at drug and alcohol treatment. I loved the philosophical discussions about modern attempts to analyze and treat his habits. Is the propensity genetic? Is it due to faulty upbringing? Is it due to a painful disorder that wasn't treated? He makes you think.

  • an inspirational story definitely worth reading....

    Unlike most people I've talked to, I had never heard of this book and was intrigued by the story line, so i thought i'd give it a try. I'm so glad I did... the story was inspirational and so full of truth. I was intrigued because growing up, I was the good, quiet kid who never touched or came near any drugs. I had never seen somebody high on anything, and besides television's often inaccurate depictions of drug addicts and the drugs used, I knew nothing. Reading this book really gave me insight into the world of an addict and i was intrigued. Frey's story of survival, and particularly how he survived by NOT following the 12 steps that his counselor's swore were the only way to ensure sobriety and abstinence, and survived on his own terms by simply not doing them whether he wanted to ...

  • no words to describe

    Give me a break!!! Show me a memoir o biography that is all truth and that the author never changes the events or names. I do not care what otheres think, this book is a great book for anyone not just addicts. I was able to see another view of things and it helped me realize how many people must go through this experience of rehab. I appalaud Mr. Frey for writing this book it took lots of guts no matter if he embelished on some of the stroy. It still takes alot to go back and write about a past that is so dark and to show the reader that no matter how tuff a situation one can come out of the darkness.