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Running with Scissors: A Memoir

Running with Scissors: A Memoir

List Price: $25.95
Your Price: $17.13
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Sharp, funny and sad
Review: This book is both hysterical and sad. From Burroughs' being given up by his mother to her psychiatrist and living in his bizarre home (Christmas tree still up in May, cockroaches galore in the kitchen cabinets, a young child appropriately nicknamed 'Poo,' moving the living room furniture outdoors and living outside all summer, fortune-telling via 'Bible-dipping' or reading contents of the toilet bowl, and an affair with a much older man - to name a few), it's laugh-out-loud funny to read as well as shocking and dismaying that someone could grow up this way. Yet Burroughs seems to keep his sense of humor intact throughout. I can't help think of the Osbornes as I read this book, and thinking how wholesome they seem in comparison. If this book doesn't make you laugh, it'll at least most likely make you think your childhood wasn't that bad after all (if you do indeed feel that way sometimes).

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: His childhood wasn't as bad as they made it out to be.
Review: I read a review in the Washington post when this came out. It sounded like this was going to be really f-ed up, so I had to get it. I read some of his short stories online and some of those were harsher than anything in this book. This was still a damn good book, but I know people more messed up than he was.
In the Post review they mentioned parts cut out 'cause they were too dirty. One was an incident involving his foster siblings and a tampon, whatever that was. He remains really positive through this whole thing, with his Mom going crazy, an old guy sticking it to him and living in a dump. There's no way of knowing if that's the way he really felt at the time or if it's to make him seem more innocent, or if it's to leave his feelings neutral to let us fill in our own.
I lent it to my Brother whom I think had it just as bad as this kid and he loved it. Just wait for his book man, I'm telling you.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Hysterical
Review: One of the best books I ever read, it made me feel like my crazy family was almost normal up against Mr. Burroughs' life and family. He made me laugh, gasp, and I never wanted to put the book down. I highly reccomend this book!

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Curiously unaffecting
Review: The world of literature is rife with outrageous and funny coming-of-age stories (Winterson's "Oranges Are Not the Only Fruit" comes immediately to mind, as do David Sedaris' biographic essays), and though this qualifies on both counts, it's curiously unaffecting. Neither as funny as it could be, nor as moving, the book is authored by a merely so-so, not great, writer who seems to keep his emotions--and us--at arm's length. Could have been both wrenchingly poignant and hysterically funny, and it's neither. Too bad.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Harrowing and Hilarious
Review: I loved this book and I love Augusten Burroughs. I read a lot and this book and its dark yet ultimately positive tone has stayed with me through the weeks. For someone so young he really manages to capture the seventies with some deft strokes. He does a fine and enviable job of describing a true friendship between himself and Natalie (a girl I also fell in love with). It's never judgmental or plodding, but deeply, shockingly funny because it's so honest and straightforward. Some people do rise above the lousy hands that life deals them and Augusten Burroughs and the pseudononymous Natalie are success stories that made me feel better to know they're in the world.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A crazy coming of age story !
Review: I really don't remember when and where I heard about "Running With Scissors" -- but I just knew I had to read it. I was hooked from the very beginning. Augusten Burrough's memoir is a maddeningly funny, perceptive coming of age story. At times very graphic but ultimately a refreshing, candid tale of a very BIZARRE upbringing. A must read.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: running with scissors
Review: I found this book ugly and plodding. I can't imagine anyone comparing this author to David Sedaris. I did not find any humor whatsoever in this memoir. In my 18 years experience as a child protection social worker, I have been exposed to much more suffering than what is so graphically described in this book and don't have a thin skin, but this book left me cold.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Horrifyingly good
Review: R.W.S. is so good, yes, some of the subject matter is a little off color, but the fact that that the writer can have a sense of humor about it is amazing.
Great book!!!

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A Twisted Nightmare of a Life!
Review: If you think you have had a messed up childhood, after reading this book, you'll think again. Augusten Burroughs, in his new memoir, bravely tells us about his twisted nightmare of an upbringing by his mother, her psychiatrist, and the doctor's weird family. This was a hard book to read, and I kept telling myself this is not a memoir, it has to be fiction. This story would leave anyone else grabbing their knees, cowering in a corner, and locked-up in a mental institution for the rest of their lives. Burroughs manages to tell the story with wit and humor, and honesty. We all have childhood memories we like to keep hidden, but I give Burroughs a lot of credit for exposing his abused childhood so candidly. It's amazing that his life turned out so well after such a stressful, crazy and abused upbringing.

Beautifully written, with real emotion, and yet horribly shocking, disturbing, and disgusting at times. It is a difficult book to read, but one you will find yourself racing through to the finish line. Things get so bad in the story, it forces you to laugh to get through another chapter. A captivating read you should definitely not miss.

Joe Hanssen

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The darkest of dark humor
Review: If even ten percent of what the author describes in this alleged autobiography actually happened, he deserves a medal for survival! Apparently his parents really did name him Augusten, which explains a lot... I did laugh out loud at many many places. If you like David Sedaris and Monty Python's The Meaning of Life, you'll love this one.


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