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Original Essays | October 14, 2009

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About six months ago, at a fundraising event for the nonprofit I founded, Project H, a six-year-old girl handed me a pickle jar full of pennies.... Continue »
  1. $24.46 Sale Trade Paper add to wish list

A Million Little Pieces

by James Frey

A Million Little Pieces Cover

Synopses & Reviews

Publisher Comments:

Intense, unpredictable, and instantly engaging, A Million Little Pieces is a story of drug and alcohol abuse and rehabilitation as it has never been told before. Recounted in visceral, kinetic prose, and crafted with a forthrightness that rejects piety, cynicism, and self-pity, it brings readers face-to-face with a provocative new understanding of the nature of addiction and the meaning of recovery.

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.

A Million Little Pieces is an uncommonly genuine account of a life destroyed and a life reconstructed. It is also the introduction of a bold and talented literary voice.

Review:

"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

Review:

"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

Review:

"Gripping... A great story... You can't help but cheer his victory." Los Angeles Times Book Review

Review:

"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

Review:

"Again and again, the book delivers recollections that leave the reader winded and unsteady. James Frey's staggering recovery memoir could well be seen as the final word on the topic." San Francisco Chronicle

Review:

"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

Review:

"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

Review:

"The most lacerating tale of drug addiction since William S. Burroughs' Junky." The Boston Globe

Review:

"A brutal, beautifully written memoir." The Denver Post

Review:

"Incredible... Mesmerizing... Heart-rending." Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Review:

"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

Synopsis:

“The most lacerating tale of drug addiction since William S. Burroughs’ Junky.” —The Boston Globe

“Again and again, the book delivers recollections that leave the reader winded and unsteady. James Frey’s staggering recovery memoir could well be seen as the final word on the topic.”—San Francisco Chronicle

“A brutal, beautifully written memoir.”—The Denver Post

“Gripping . . . A great story . . . You can’t help but cheer his victory.” —Los Angeles Times Book Review

From the Trade Paperback edition.

About the Author

James Frey is originally from Cleveland. He is married and lives in New York.

What Our Readers Are Saying

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Average customer rating based on 2 comments:
haleyshanelle, April 1, 2008 (view all comments by haleyshanelle)
OMG ! this book was awesome ! , i read this bopook like 5 times ! . you never wanna take your eyes off it !
Was this comment helpful? | Yes | No
(1 of 3 readers found this comment helpful)
Arboreality, July 17, 2007 (view all comments by Arboreality)
Erm. My father has done well through AA, so I have my own feelings about AA and sobriety. Reading this book made me cry when it made me identify with my father's own struggles, which I was mostly too young to actually be part of but have always had some leftover guilt for not being more involved in. Unfortunately, the final message of the book, especially given Frey's factual challenges, made me mostly angry at the author for choosing to write a "memoir" that essentially tells other addicts that AA is for the weak and ignorant, and the only way to get through addiction is to break your way through mentally. That's fine and well, but it, like AA, doesn't work for everyone, and his dismissal of AA while simultaneously telling us about how fantastically strong he was to make it through when so many others failed mostly just made me want to punch him.
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Product Details

ISBN:
9781400031085
Author:
Frey, James
Publisher:
Random House
Subject:
General
Subject:
Substance Abuse & Addictions - General
Subject:
Personal Memoirs
Subject:
Specific Groups - General
Copyright:
Publication Date:
May 2004
Binding:
Paperback
Language:
English
Pages:
448
Dimensions:
8.02x5.16x.95 in. .70 lbs.

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