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Dry : A Memoir

Dry : A Memoir

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

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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Dry in more ways than one!
Review: "Dry," Augusten Burroughs 'sequel' to "Running With Scissors," is very dry-witted, and, I felt, not quite as engaging as his previous book. I was still thoroughly entertained (if that's the correct word for being riveted by someone else's troubles), but Burrough's writing is crisp, his story bittersweet--and funny enough to make me laugh out loud. Better than Sedaris!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: LOVE THIS BOOK
Review: This book is a must read for anyone going through recovery themselves, or with someone else.

I have never read such an honest, open account of what it's like to be an addict, and go through recovery.

This guy doesn't sugar coat a thing, it is what it is. I laughed and cried, and didn't want it to end.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: An eye-opener
Review: This book is a memoir of the author's battle with alcohol and drugs. The author is a gay man who came from an abusive background and became a successful ad writer and an out-of- control alcoholic. His account of his battle with alcohol is harrowing and devastating. He literally dissects his mind and puts into writing while detailing the thinking processes of an addict. The book is an eye opener regarding addiction. It is never a boring read...excellent overall.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Possibly better than his first!
Review: (I thought I had written a review, but I'll write one again, anyway!)

I really enjoyed this honest, moving, yet funny portrayal of Augusten's recovery from alcohol addiction. What I liked was that he didn't pull any punches. He didn't do his recovery perfectly, yet he took it seriously, for the most part. I liked that most of the book was on his recovery, how he tried to stay sober in a world that was still full of users and glorifying using. Most of the book is about what happens after he gets out of treatment, when he has to face the real world. I can relate to that. They say that treatment is about discovery and the 12 steps are about recovery, and Augusten really illustrates that point.

This book brings out more honest and heart-felt emotions than in "Running with Scissors," even underneath the wry sense of humor. I got the feeling by the end of the book Augusten becomes more truly human. I wanted to get to know Augusten by the end of his first memoir; by the end of this one, I wanted to become his friend.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Simply Wonderful Read
Review: Addiction is not funny. And recovery is not entertaining. Unless, that is, these subjects are in the hands of Augusten Burroughs. Then, it is not merely unexpectedly funny and entertaining but appropriately poignant and touching as well. In DRY, the follow-up to his bestselling memoir RUNNING WITH SCISSORS, Burroughs is all grown up and working in the cutthroat world of advertising. To cope with his high stress and demanding career, not to mention the issues and trauma surrounding his childhood, Burroughs drinks. And drinks. And drinks. In order to keep his job, Burroughs checks himself into a 30-day rehabilitation program. With the support of the rehab staff and his fellow patients, he starts to evaluate his drinking and his life, soon admitting to his alcoholism. But when he finds himself back at work, surrounded by old friends, enemies and drinking buddies, sobriety proves to be a difficult challenge.

With sobriety, Burroughs must not only come to terms with his friendship with HIV positive Pighead, he must also make painful choices about new friends and lovers. Sober living is, of course, not without its temptations and Burroughs is honest that not all of his post-rehab decisions were good ones. But honesty is a key component in DRY; it is never lacking in this memoir. Powered by lots of coffee and fresh insight, Burroughs is just as hilarious in describing his navigation of a life clean and sober as he is in describing his drunken escapades. The supporting cast is full of similarly neurotic figures, which just goes to show you that everyone has an interesting story to tell. Burroughs, however, concentrates on his own and the book reads like a cross between a great tale told to close friends, a stand-up routine and, most often, a therapeutic catharsis.

DRY is simply wonderful. It is a frightening look at an awful situation and a difficult triumph told in Burroughs's unique and hysterically funny voice. Comparisons with the work of David Sedaris are obvious, but Burroughs has a much darker and grittier side and his observances are most often pointed inward, resulting in a bittersweet and heartbreaking tale told with sarcasm, wit and laugh-out-loud moments. Augusten Burroughs is a natural storyteller and his best stories are about himself. DRY is not always comfortable, but it is never predictable and is thoroughly rewarding.

From happy hours lasting until the next day with his mortician friend, to the silly and sad rituals of rehab and recovery, from bad news boyfriends to the bedside of the ever-patient Pighead, DRY is an easy read but a hard emotional journey. It is a hip and eccentric addition to a genre that is often dull, sappy or whitewashed. For those wondering what happened to the little boy in RUNNING WITH SCISSORS, and for those meeting Burroughs for the first time in DRY, you are sure to be challenged, appalled, inspired and enchanted.

--- Reviewed by Sarah Rachel Egelman

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: As much as I loved Running with Scissors. . .
Review: this book was a big disappointment. This is the Burroughs of Sellevision, not the absolutely fascinating Burroughs of Running with Scissors. If you enjoyed Sellevision, his overly long, beyond mean-spirited attack on Sally Struthers may amuse you. I though it was cheap and offensive and simply stopped caring about how that boy from Running with Scissors turned out.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: 100% honest....for the most part
Review: This book reaches out and touches you. In a world of cliches about addiction and recovery, this book was cliche free. The author paints with all colors, and humor is one of his stong points. My impression was that Mr. Burroughs goes a bit over the top when describing his wild days. But that's the idea, ALL RECOVERING ADDICTS DO, and he is in recovery. The author trys to be honest as he can be. Anyone who doubts the reality of this book needs to attend an AA meeting. I loved it.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Augusten does it again!
Review: "Dry" is possibly better than "Running With Scissors." In it, Augusten Burroughs gives us a funny, but hardly light-hearted, look at his alcohol addiction and recovery. At first he pooh-poohs the idea he might have a problem, and wants to run away from the run-down rehab center he checks himself into. But along the way, something clicks, and he realizes that yes, he does have a problem, and he has to do something about it. Recovery, though, proves to be more difficult than it's advertised to be, and most of the book is dedicated to Augusten adjusting to trying to maintain sobriety in a hostile world, complete with a friend dying of AIDS, a forbidden lover whose first love is crack, and a jealous co-worker who tries to tip Augusten off the wagon. Sobriety is not for wimps, and Augusten -- and the readers -- learn this lesson the hard way. A must read for all Augusten fans and those who are struggling with any kind of addiction.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Really Great Follow Up
Review: After reading about Augusten Burroughs train wreck of a childhood in "Running With Scissors", I didn't know if I was up for tackling his alcoholic adulthood in "Dry".
I'm glad I did. And frankly less of a tackle, than a roll with a familiar face/voice, I thought it terrific.
Having just recently read Carrie Fishers "The Best Awful" these books were like damaged book ends that both meet in the middle at rehab. But where the bulk of Fishers book was her lack of pill popping that quickly leads to her prolonged mental breakdown, Burroughs bottoms out near the start of the book, as a successful advertising whiz kid whose normal nightly consumption is at least twelve drinks. His story is of Manhattan as seen through the eyes that couldn't see before. Or at the very least focus. A dear friend sick with AIDS, a high pressure job, and a toxic crack smoking boyfriend are all potential disasters waiting to send him back to the bottle. Funny, dark and terribly honest, it's cup runs over with hope.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Can Get In To The Heart Of It
Review: This was an easy book to get in to the heart of. Excellent style of writing. The author takes you through the painstaking journey of the different forms of abuse and how it drives the adult in to addictions that are so difficult to control. There are many books out on the market that deal with abuse, and yet only a few such as 'Dry','Running With Scissors' and Nightmares Echo' allow the reader to understand without to much of the physical look in to that side of their lives.


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