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Nabaza.net-The MarketPlace - A Million Little Pieces

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List Price: $15.95
Our Price: $10.85
Your Save: $ 5.10 ( 32% )
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Manufacturer: Anchor
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Average Customer Rating:     

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Binding: Paperback Dewey Decimal Number: 362.29092 EAN: 9780307276902 ISBN: 0307276902 Label: Anchor Manufacturer: Anchor Number Of Items: 1 Number Of Pages: 448 Publication Date: 2005-09-22 Publisher: Anchor Release Date: 2005-09-22 Studio: Anchor
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Editorial Reviews:
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“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
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Spotlight customer reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: incredible Comment: True or not, this is one of the most amazing books that I have ever read.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Glad it is back on Amazon for sale. Comment: OK, I haven't read it, but I am glad it is for sale at Amazon once again. Why? Because what memoir is totally true? What biography is totally true? We get spin on everything these days. Lastly, it should be for sale because of what Oprah Winfrey did to him on TV. Oprah lost me as a fan on the day she clubbed Fry. That was uncalled for. Oprah is far from perfect, but those who are rich think they are perfect and feel free to club others over the head for any small imperfection. I hope this book sells a million and then more. I have been a chemical dependent RN and after reading the other reviews, I think this book will help many of those people who have lost hope.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Whose the target audience? Comment: I wanted to send an inspiring story to someone I'm trying to mentor from a distance. He's in an Arizona prison where he's spent a fair amount of the last 20 years for non-violent criminal offenses. To preview it, I got a copy from my local small town library. I knew of the book and the Oprah controversy. However the last book I read was Frey's "Bright Shiny Morning" which touched me in many ways. So when I picked up "A Million Little Pieces", a young employee gave it a bad review. She didn't like the language-lots of the f word- and could not get into it. I told her my reasons to read it and she thought that perhaps someone in the prison population that had a history of drug addiction and criminal behavior could benefit from Frey's story.
Verdict is still out on that one. I purchased it Aug 26 and last I heard my mentee still had not received it. Apparently they have some difficulty receiving things, even books from Amazon, in prison. So his review is the one we need to have as he has a bit in common with James Frey and lots not so much.
I liked this book. I learned more about alcohol and drug addiction. It may have been embellished but it wasn't sanitized. This is from a perspective of someone who went out of control early in life and the consequences of that behaviour. As in so many of these stories, James Frey came from a "privleged family" -this is what I call families whose parents are educated, successful in society and have way more wealth than most families.
My mentee didn't travel that path. I hope he can identify with some of this. I hope he can also figure out how to stay off drugs. His future in life may literally depend on it.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Oprah's book club failed me Comment: James Frey wrote a book lauded as a memoir, which turns out to be untrue.
Similarly, this book was lauded as a good read.
This as it turns out, is also untrue.
The story of the journey through rehab is repetitious - but its worst offense is that the characters are unsympathetic.
It's hard to feel sorry for them, despite their dire circumstances.
Finally, this story depicts a series of dental appointments that require extensive surgery without local anesthesia.
This is a ridiculous fabrication.
Drug abuse is not a contraindication for local anesthesia.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Frustrating and annoying Comment: James Frey caused quite the scandal when he had to "come clean" about coming clean. He wrote this memoir and received widespread praise for the writing and the amazing accomplishment in beating a serious drug and alcohol addiction. But after being featured on Oprah, many that were involved in Frey's true story came forward to say that his portrayal of his experience was largely exaggerated and untrue. He finally admitted that his book, A Million Little Pieces, was based on his life story, but was embellished and not entirely true. With that in mind, I sat down to read what was still touted as an amazing book.
Frey chronicles his experience waking up after a serious trauma to find himself on a plane on the way to rehab. His family, after many years of not knowing what to do with him, has found him on the streets of Chicago badly beaten and in terrible shape. They are taking him to a reputable inpatient treatment center in Minnesota. James goes through a painful detoxification process and cannot come to terms with his plight in life, how he got there, and if he really wants to be clean and continue to live. The rest of the book is his next six weeks in rebab.
The story is, in some ways, engrossing. The obstacles for an addict to overcome in order to stay sober are staggering. Especially when overcoming the extent of drugs and alcohol that Frey claims he had taken. He underwent oral surgury without the aid of painkillers because to give him painkillers would undo the detox he already went through. He suffered violent bouts of nausea each day while his body adjusted to the clean lifestyle. And he made friends with a cast of characters as he relayed the horrible life on the streets that he lived prior to being carted off to rehab.
There are two major problems with this book however. The first is the prose. His writing style is difficult to follow and frustrating. It makes it difficult to stick with the story and annoying to read. Secondly, knowing that the story was not completely accurate made it ring hollow. It would have been fine if the reader was to believe it was completely true, or it would have been fine if it had been presented as a work of fiction. But to read along and wonder what parts were true and what parts were invented leaves the reader with a frustrating feeling of being swindled. This book had such potential, and maybe some can overlook his lies, but for me it tainted the entire story and left it feeling empty.
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