A Million Little Pieces
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Average customer review:Product Description
James Frey wakes up on a plane, with no memory of the preceding two weeks. His face is cut and his body is covered with bruises. He has no wallet and no idea of his destination. He has abused alcohol and every drug he can lay his hands on for a decade â and he is aged only twenty-three.
What happens next is one of the most powerful and extreme stories ever told. His family takes him to a rehabilitation centre. And James Frey starts his perilous journey back to the world of the drug and alcohol-free living. His lack of self-pity is unflinching and searing.
A Million Little Pieces is a dazzling account of a life destroyed and a life reconstructed. It is also the introduction of a bold and talented literary voice. (20040322)
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #1152 in Books
- Published on: 2004-05-10
- Binding: Paperback
- 528 pages
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
When he entered a residential treatment centre at the age of twenty-three, James Frey had destroyed his body and his mind almost beyond repair. He faced a stark choice: accept that he wasn't going to see twenty-four or step into the fallout of his smoking wreck of a life and take drastic action. Surrounded by patients as troubled as he, Frey had to fight to find his own way to confront the consequences of the life he had lived so far, and to determine what future, if any, he has. A Million Little Pieces is an uncommon account of a life destroyed and a life reconstructed.
Evening Standard
`Frey really can write. Brilliantly. And if you don't think so, f*** you'
Review
Introduces a major new literary talent (20050826)
Foreign rights already sold in eleven countries (20060523)
A breathtaking book that has the charisma and power of One Flew Over the Cuckooâs Nest â mesmerizing and disturbing (20060601)
Rave reactions from all over the trade (20060701)
Movie rights optioned, with Gus Van Sant lined up as director
âExcellent ⦠Frey's storytelling feels compulsive, involuntary ⦠poignant and tragic. The forthcoming film will almost certainly be a cult hit ⦠The good thing about Frey is that he writes as if he needs to; I hope his new compulsion thrivesâ (William Leith, Spectator )
âJames Freyâs utterly mesmerising account ⦠[is] easily the most remarkable non-fiction book about drugs and drug taking since Hunter S Thompson's Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas ⦠As a memoir, it is almost mythic. You can imagine it made epic by Martin Scorsese, the auteur of wayward American maleness in all its extremity ⦠Utterly compulsiveâ (Observer )
âFrey really can write. Brilliantly. And if you donât think so, f*** youâ (Evening Standard )
âClear sighted and intellectually honestâ (Literary Review )
âA heartbreaking memoir ⦠inspirational and essentialâ (Bret Easton Ellis )
âThis book is definitely going to be huge ⦠There is no question that heâs a good writer. As soon as you start reading the book, Freyâs voice rings out. Itâs clear and sharp and turbocharged ⦠We love rehab memoirs. This is a good one. It might even be a great oneâ (Independent )
âAn extraordinary and deeply moving book that will make you think about family, friendship, love, religion, death and perhaps most of all, the human spiritâ (Irish Sunday Independent )
âStartling and ultimately breath takingâ (Kirkus Reviews )
âHorribly honest and funny ⦠Read this immediatelyâ (Gus Van Sant )
âHarrowing, poetic and rather magnificentâ (FHM )
âJames Frey spent ten years addicted to alcohol and crack before going into rehab at the age of 23. This unrelenting memoir of his recovery spares no detail. Luckily, he is a good writer â indulgent and uncompromisingâ (Metro )
âFrey is selfish, egocentric, violent and pompous . . . What redeems this insufferably bad mannered book is that, at the end of the day, Frey can write. Brilliantlyâ (Scotsman )
'Frey's writing style vividly conveys the horrors of addiction ... dark humour and sharp observations are evidence of a keen intelligence and an unusual strength of character ... a totally absorbing book' (The Magistrate )
âHarrowing and unflinching ⦠This is not a book about drugs but about their aftermath ⦠Though definitely not for the faint hearted, Frey is often darkly and self deprecatingly funny. This is, in essence, a story of redemption and an incredibly moving one. This is a great bookâ (Waterstone's Books Quarterly )
'This book is a raging, brilliant debut.' (Waterstone's Books Quarterly )



