Biographies

Google

General

General
Family and Childhood
Women
Special Needs
Audio Books

Historical

Historical
British Historical
Canadian Historical
United States Historical
Civil War
Holocaust
Large Print
Military Leaders
Political Leaders
Presidents
Religious Leaders
Rich and Famous
Royalty
Prime Ministers

Ethnic

General
Black-African American
Australian
Chinese
Hispanic
Irish
Japanese
Jewish
Native American Indian
Native Canadian Indian
Scandinavian

Careers

Autobiographies and Memoirs
Astronauts
Business
Criminals
Doctors and Nurses
Journalists
Lawyers and Judges
Military and Spies
Philosophers
Scientists
Social Scientists and Psychologists
Sociologists
Teachers

Sports

General
Baseball
Basketball
Explorers
Football
Golf
Hockey
Soccer

Videos

General
A and E Biography
Hollywood
Intimate Portrait

HobbyDo


Search Now:

SPECIAL NEEDS BOOKS

Posted in Special Needs (Tuesday, May 13, 2008)

Written by Daniel Gottlieb. By Sterling. The regular list price is $12.95. Sells new for $7.41. There are some available for $8.42.
Read more...

Purchase Information
5 comments about Letters to Sam: A Grandfather's Lessons on Love, Loss, and the Gifts of Life.
  1. I can honestly say, even as a voracious reader, that this is one of the best books I have ever read. Dan Gottlieb's wisdom, love, and compassion for his grandson, diagnosed with autism, are very evident in this loving collection of letters on all subjects of life. Paralyzed in a horrific accident as a young man, he is the most obvious role model for the boy in advising him on many important matters of living--love, loss, happiness, and most of all, being an individual and learning from life's experiences, no matter what they may be. Sam's diagnosis of autism makes the book all the more poignant, as Gottlieb realizes that the boy may not understand all that is said in the book, but the gesture of writing it shows that he believes in Sam's possible eventual ability to appreciate it.

    Without giving too much away, one particular letter that especially touched me was one in which Gottlieb (who is a therapist by profession) relates a story of counseling a young woman who is having serious life difficulties when he suddenly has an embarrassing accident with his urinary bag. In this recount, he admits to severe embarrassment and ultimate emotional connection with the girl, who shows him empathy and understanding even as she is in desperate need of it herself when she goes to him.

    This book is not about autism or living with disability. It's about living, loving, and learning how to continue on after disappointment, loss, and tragedy. Gottlieb's amazing courage and wisdom will benefit anyone who reads this great work. I think I know what I'm buying everyone for Christmas next year. :)


  2. "When it gets dark enough, men see stars," according to Emerson. In irreducibly simple yet profound words, Dan Gottlieb shares the wisdom he has derived from living in a wheelchair, battling his own inner demons, and practicing psychology for the past 25 years. His loves, losses, and lessons are informed and inspired by the unique bond he shares with his grandson, Sam, who is also different--growing up with a diagnosis on the autism spectrum. I wish I had this book when my son was diagnosed with autism over 20 years ago. I am overjoyed that we have it now for "Letters to Sam" is a guide for the soul, much more than just another autism book, and a wonderful gift to families.
    --Robert A. Naseef, Ph.D., author of Special Children, Challenged Parents and co-editor Voices from the Spectrum.

    Voices from the Spectrum: Parents, Grandparents, Siblings, People With Autism, And Professionals Share Their Wisdom


  3. Perhaps this is more a sharing than a review. My husband had Polio when he was 25 and for the next 51 years he was a quadraplegic who finished college and worked for 35 yrs. He read this book and commented, the book gave many insights as to what life is really like from a wheelchair and that we are all different. When he died suddenly two days after Christmas I purchased this book for every member of our family to read.
    Arlyce, his wife.


  4. The product is what I expected. It arrived on time and in the condition advertised.


  5. These inspiring letters about love, loss and the gifts of life are as jewels in the mud. They shine brightly with a humble, honest and profound wisdom that nurtures light within and beyond darkness. A compelling read you will want to share with friends and family.


Read more...


Posted in Special Needs (Tuesday, May 13, 2008)

Written by Marya Hornbacher. By Harper Perennial. The regular list price is $13.95. Sells new for $6.95. There are some available for $4.41.
Read more...

Purchase Information
5 comments about Wasted: A Memoir of Anorexia and Bulimia (P.S.).
  1. As a mother to a teenage girl with an eating disorder, I was able to identify (sometimes uncomfortably too close to home) with Marya Hornbacher. It was a good insight to see that this horrible illness begins at a very early age, how not to blame ourselves as parents, and how it is a daily battle for the person with the illness.
    I read this book over a period of a week and haven't stopped remarking on it to people I know, especially other parents of children/teenagers with eating disorders.
    This book came from the gut and goes directly into the readers'.
    Adina


  2. This book is amazing, it keeps you captavated from the time you start to read it. Im recovered and the things she discribed are so very true. If your looking for a book on eating disorders this is one of very few to read. Dont listen to the negitive reveiws for this one, Its well worth the money.


  3. The author dives deep into her life and the choices she made. She doesn't hold back. Up front and personal.


  4. Marya wasn't always the way she is today. She used to be the all American girl eating PB and J's while she watched her cartoons, but when Marya was eight years old something in her brain changed and since then she has never been the same.
    Author Marya Hornbacher beautifully illustrates her struggles with bulimia and anorexia in her autobiography Wasted. She shows a world that people hardly get to see and explains the life and ways of bulimics and anorectics that is both compelling and inspiring.
    Wasted takes you through 10 years of Marya's life as she slowly jumps back and forth between anorexia and bulimia. It depicts the everyday struggles of the disease; how the body slowly stops to care about what is occurring, the constant worries about food, and the fear that someone might find out and God forbid, possibly try to help you! It goes in depth about the psychological factors of the disease and explains it all in a way that is understandable and relevant. This book will both shock and sicken you as you discover what goes behind closed doors of these two heartless diseases.
    My praise is endless for this novel and I thank it for opening my eyes to the mysterious world that is impossible to fully understand unless you've experienced the ordeal first hand. Many people could benefit from taking the time to read Wasted, which will help to clue people in and provide a better understanding to the problems in our society and what goes on to the people who are enduring these struggles daily. However this book is not a constant thriller and amongst the eye opening and realization moments there will be a few parts that are tedious and almost seem to drag on. In spite of the occasional drowsy sections this book offers an incredible insight inside the secret lives of bulimics and anorectics and I would confidently recommend it to anyone who wants a brilliant and inspiring read.


  5. Marya Hornbacher is the mediator between the everyday human being and the world's most widely misunderstood creatures of society: the eating-disordered. In "Wasted: A Memoir of Anorexia and Bulimia", she explains to readers that eating disorders are not just "phases" that teenage "girls" go through, but rather an intense, passionate desire for power that "strips you of all power" instead.
    Hornbacher, a freelance journalist who is also the author of "The Center of Winter" and "Madness: A Bipolar Life", developed bulimia at age nine, developed alcohol and drug issues at the age of thirteen, and became anorexic at the age of fifteen. After her release from a residential treatment hospital, she attended the University of Minnesota and wrote for the local paper, accepting her scholarship to American University later in 1992. She later developed other physical problems following her continued eating disorders.
    Although a rather sullen story of the highs and lows of her struggle with weight, Hornbacher addresses the point that eating disorders, cultural obsession with weight and body, food, and control have a lot in common. In one section of the book, she writes that an eating disorder is


Read more...


Posted in Special Needs (Tuesday, May 13, 2008)

Written by Lance Armstrong and Sally Jenkins. By Berkley Trade. The regular list price is $15.00. Sells new for $2.74. There are some available for $0.01.
Read more...

Purchase Information
5 comments about It's Not About the Bike: My Journey Back to Life.
  1. This is a great book for his fears, fight, hope and established interest in cancer. It is an inspirational story for those with cancer as well as their friends, for information and support. The only reason I didn't give it five stars is because it is a little bit about the bike, but it is an excellent book to give hope to those with cancer to be cured and survive.


  2. The story of Lance Armstong's life up until 2001 will be a challenge to put down for even those who are not fans of cycling. This story unfolds as an enthralling voyage taken alongside one of the greatest athletes in history from his very low points facing apparent death by brain cancer to the high points of full recovery and winning the Tour de France.

    Lance is extremely strong willed, bold, determined, and presents a story for the ages with his first autobiography. His story is so compelling that I highly recommend this book to anyone.


  3. Quite good. The compelling part of the book is to hear Lance tell how he overcame advanced-stage prostate cancer, with treatments that fully debilitated him. Only then did he come back to win the Tour de France for the first time! (And the only time in this book.) He is frank about the rougher sides of his personality, but does go beyond his illness to learn how to be a better person. You are cheering for him all the way. Although written with a ghost writer, it is his voice that comes through loudly and clearly. The book ends with him quite in love with his wife and first child, projecting a family life into the future. Sadly, as we know, it was not to be, nor did he stick it out with Sheryl Crow who had yet to appear in his story.


  4. A frank and honest portrait of one mans struggle. This is not a 'wow, aren't I great' book, but one that shows the awful journey people have to take and what gets them to "over come the odds".

    The achievement of the subject of this entertaining read is his amazing recovery from cancer which was followed shortly afterwards by spectacular sporting success. The book is undoubtedly compelling, and was simply, clearly and strikingly written.

    Even if you're not into cycling you will love this book.


  5. Both my wife and I are currently cancer patients. The book gave us the courage to believe that we can beat cancer. Lance's book is a must read for anyone who has cancer or if you have anyone in your family going through cancer treatements. It is a great mix of athletics and the will to survive and what it takes to accomplish both. Get it and read it!


Read more...


Posted in Special Needs (Tuesday, May 13, 2008)

Written by Dave Pelzer. By Plume. The regular list price is $12.00. Sells new for $2.62. There are some available for $0.08.
Read more...

Purchase Information
5 comments about A Man Named Dave: A Story of Triumph and Forgiveness.
  1. The book is well written and details the journey of a man to seek answers for his childhood abuse at the hands of his mother. There were times I felt the story was too drawn out but overall it is an excellent story of courage and self-discovery.
    Would highly recommend this book.


  2. I'm glad Dave wrote this book. It made his story come full circle and now the world can read how one man can truly make a difference and move on with his life.


  3. this is the third sequel to a child called it! i like the part where dave pelzer's mom talks about his father dying, and asks, don't you have something for me? didn't he give you anything before he passed away? and dave says no! father didn't give me a thing! then his mom says you're lying! and slaps him and makes his nose bleed! read it if you like dave pelzer as much as me!


  4. Very well written book. It is very inspiring. Once you start reading you cant put it down. This man has been through so much and triumphed.


  5. I have read the trilogy of this book and believe it to be uplifting and just truly amazing. It makes you strive to be all you can be and to treat others in the way you want to be treated. He is a true inspiration to anyone.


Read more...


Posted in Special Needs (Tuesday, May 13, 2008)

Written by Jean-Dominique Bauby. By Vintage. The regular list price is $12.95. Sells new for $6.93. There are some available for $7.29.
Read more...

Purchase Information
5 comments about The Diving Bell and the Butterfly (Vintage International) (Vintage International).
  1. I thought this was a wonderful quick read. I saw the movie and couldn't wait to read the book. How amazing that in all his struggles he was able to write this book. It shows you that even without body function the amazing strength of his will can go on.


  2. The word "unique" is probably overused, but here it applies. This book was written by a stroke victim who was paralized except for one eye-lid. He laboriously wrote the book with the help of a therapist who kept reading the alphabet and the author would blink his eye when she came to the right letter. In this way, he is probably the only completely paralized stroke victim who could transmit his feelings and memories. Since his brain and senses functioned perfectly, he was able to do this. If you think that this is a depressing book, you are wrong - it is really uplifting. The movie made from this book is also very much worth seeing.


  3. Its one of the few times that the movie adds to the book, both should be experienced and are inspirational


  4. This is in review of the english translation by Jeremy Leggatt.

    This is a difficult book to review. On the one hand, the chapter in the life of Jean-Do Bauby that this autobiographical piece captures is one which no decent person would wish on another human-being. Let alone imagine themselves having to live out. In this regard, this is a hero story of epic proportions.

    But as an author, and as the protagonist of the stories he chose to share, the Jean Bauby of The Diving Bell and the Butterfly is something else entirely.

    I began the book with infinite amounts of sympathy for the man and his plight. By the end of the book I felt I had just finished reading some of the lower-rated sections of the Michelin Travel Guide.

    And this is the troubling part - is a person who reads this book and is left feeling less-than-inspired heartless and unfeeling? Or is the rave reviews of the book more because of the feat and life lived to create it and less because of the book itself?

    In the end I was left with the impression that the Jean Bauby as presented in the book was a difficult man to sympathize with. I am not a fan of the Randian hero, so perhaps this flavors my feelings, but I came to feel that the diving bell was no new feature in his life. It just affected his ability to connect and relate to others before it came to afflict his entire body.

    Ultimately, as a book, it was disappointing. And as a window into his diving bell, I can only hope or assume that there was more to the man than came through.

    For those who knew him, I'm sure it was a gift. But for the rest of us, I think that the emperor is naked.


  5. I was so inspired by the premise, and I wondered what beautiful prose a man "locked in" would produce. Unfortunately, I found it average. The most inspirational part of the book was his willpower to write it, in his condition. It is also valuable to note how much he could think under the circumstances.
    His situation however, was not unique, though his case was more extreme than most.
    His life was not particularly inspirational - he seemed to live for fine cars and fine food and travel. A nice book, but probably more meaningful to his family and friends than the population at large.
    Look elsewhere for inspiration.


Read more...


Posted in Special Needs (Tuesday, May 13, 2008)

Written by John Elder Robison. By Crown. The regular list price is $25.95. Sells new for $15.47. There are some available for $12.99.
Read more...

Purchase Information
5 comments about Look Me in the Eye: My Life with Asperger's.
  1. This is less a book about what it's like to live with Asperger's, than it is a collection of anecdotes from someone who happens to have the syndrome. If the purpose of the book is to convince that the author experiences emotions similarly to 'normal' people but expresses them differently, it fails in that regard. There was, to me, the feeling that the author is emotionally 'robotic' in a way that 'normal' people are not. The book means to humanize him (and people like him) beyond what would be the first impressions of someone who didn't know better, but only the most judgemental observer would assume less humanity than is on display in these pages. If anything, the book confirms the impression of a certain roboticness which is at odds with a certain humanity.

    Maybe an autobiographical book by an author who lacks ability to be introspective should be expected to be shallow on some level. But it would have been interesting to at least go into how his Asperger's affected his first marriage, or how it forced him to leave his corporate job, or how it affects his personal relationships with his wife and son. There is almost no direct information on those topics in the book. The author chose not to write about certain more-personal topics which would have provided the most meaningful and interesting cases in point of living with Aspergers. As such, I felt slightly cheated by the book.


  2. I was disappointed in this book. Reading through the other reviews I was astonished at how many people thought it was "amazing" and "interesting". I thought it was full of boring anecdotes and I was appalled at how proud he was of his mean pranks. If the meanness is a result of the Asperger's syndrome it was not well explained, so I had a hard time accepting that the meanness was out of his control. It did appear to be poorly edited, with lots of inconsistencies. There were several places, usually at the end of chapters, where he leaves us hanging with such teasers as, "Little did I know it would get much worse." (Sorry, paraphrasing here - I don't have the book in front of me). Turn the page to the next chapter and we don't really find out what was "much worse" (again, paraphrasing). This was very frustrating and made the book difficult to follow. I've read many books along this line and this was just poorly written, by what appears to be a mean, arrogant man. Maybe he's not really like that, but that's what comes across. I hardly ever dislike a book, but it was all I could do to finish this one


  3. I am recently married to a wonderful man with Asperger's as well as step mom to a pre teen boy with asperger's. This book gave me a whole new insight to them both... There were several chapters where I either thought to myself that he was writing about my husband or my son...


  4. I highly recommend this book to anyone who has children or grandchildren or other family members or friends who have children with autistic issues; especially Asperger issues.


  5. While reading Augustin Burroughs description of his brother's asperger's it hit me like a brick. When he was describing John Elder my loved one fell into every category he mentioned. John Elder has done an amazing job giving us a glimpse into his life. I found every emotion in this book. I laughed, I cried, and I came out knowing and feeling I understood alot more about Asperger's. This book flows very well and even though big is a very fast read.

    I think John Elder definately has a gift for writing too! I would recommend this book to anyone. I will also add him to my list of authors to purchase everytime they have a new book come out. There are currently only 2 authors on that list and I am an avid reader.


Read more...


Posted in Special Needs (Tuesday, May 13, 2008)

Written by Dave Pelzer. By HCI. The regular list price is $11.95. Sells new for $3.75. There are some available for $0.98.
Read more...

Purchase Information
5 comments about A Child Called "It": One Child's Courage to Survive.
  1. Loved it, Got it in No time at all.. Was really, really happy with my purchase!


  2. A Child Called "It" is based on a true story. David is only five years old when his mother starts drinking and becomes and alcoholic, and his father isn't brave enough to stop any of this. David's mother was once a perfect mother and everyone loved her it wasn't until she started drinking that she lost everyone around her, she took out all her anger on poor David and would punch him and beat him. Years later David was known as "IT", "it's" mother believed to not use his name because he is not worth it. He was also not aloud to sleep in the house because he's not part of the "family" so he was moved into the garage. One day while "it" was cleaning up the kitchen, "mother" came in drunk as ever she sat down on the chair and watched David try to finish the dishes in the amount of time she gave him. As he looked at her and won't clean, she soon lost it and through a knife into "it's" stomach. As you read this book you can feel that you're with there with David on his journey for the fight of his life.
    I absolutely loved this book, I couldn't put it down. It was an amazing book of a child's fight for his life. It was also the third worse child abuse case in the state of California.


  3. When I first read the book, it became one of my most favorite memoirs. Peltzer, I thought, had such courage, strength, and endurance despite having gone through such a harrowing experience.

    Then I find out everything he'd written was a lie and that the only reason he was a bestseller was the fact that he bought many of his books himself. Peltzer lied about his childhood and I realize now that the reason how he kept me captivated was that he painted gruesome images that horrify and delights the mind.

    I have tried reading his book after finding out but could not stomach it - the lies stopped me in my tracks. But overall, the book is good but remember to read it as fiction.


  4. Google 'Dysfunction For Dollars" and "New York Times" as one search phrase and see what Dave's brother and grandmother are saying. His second brother actually backed him up ... and then wrote his own bestselling book. This is also a guy who buys an estimated 40,000 copies of his book from stores to sell at speaking engagements. Don't worry it's not made up, it's admitted to by Dave's wife, Marsha, who's also vice president of his company. It's there in the same article mentioned above. Er ... perhaps that explains why it's a "bestseller."

    This is the same as the writer who claimed to have lived with a pack of wolves after surviving the holocaust. Don't be so quick to assume they're telling the truth. Oh and don't shoot the messenger.


  5. If it's a fake or not, I don't care. It makes you think every moment how you're treating your kids and how you can be a better parent. Very good.


Read more...


Posted in Special Needs (Tuesday, May 13, 2008)

Written by Mitch Albom. By Broadway. The regular list price is $13.95. Sells new for $4.44. There are some available for $1.20.
Read more...

Purchase Information
5 comments about Tuesdays with Morrie: An Old Man, a Young Man, and Life's Greatest Lesson.
  1. I had been given multiple recommendations from friends and family to read this simple, but heartwarming book, and I didn't decide to sit down and read it until recently. The author decided to take his career as a sports writer, and use his writing to tell the words of an inspiring man. Mitch Abom wrote sports highlights in the Detroit Free Press, and tried to write novels about sports instead. After not becoming successful with his first few novels, he decided to try a different type of book.

    Tuesdays With Morrie is about Morrie Schwartz, a retired history professor at Brandeis University who is dying of ALS, which is more commonly known as Lou Gehrig's Diesase. A former student of his named Mitch Albom hadn't seen his old professor in years but he saw the old man on Nightline. Albom decided to visit Morrie. After a few visits, Morrie and Mitch decided to meet every Tuesday to discuss the meaning of life and how to embrace life. More specific things like family and love were discussed and to be honest, hearing a dying man say such things was a little depressing. However, the morals that Morrie taught made me think more about life and how to live it to its fullest. In reading this book (which was a quick read by the way) I learned an interesting viewpoint on life. Considering the fact that the book is about a dying man, you can figure out how it ends, but it surely finishes strong, and with a powerful message. The writing was easy to understand, but at times, the book became tedious and depressing. Overall, the message overweighed the depressing parts of the book.

    Tuesdays with Morrie was published ten years ago, yet it was a multiple award winning novel. The story of Morrie Schwartz has been and will continue to be remembered by many.


  2. Tuesdays With Morrie
    Danny Cubberly
    One could describe Mitch Albom in many ways. He's a good listener, a good student, and an emotionally deep human being. But most importantly, he was the student of someone he described as "a man who loved dancing and having a good time." This man was Morrie Schwartz. Mitch Albom wrote down the lessons that Morrie would talk to him about every Tuesday. Through those inspiring life-lessons came this story that teaches us all to live life to the fullest.
    All the lessons in this book were inspirational. Although Morrie was slowly wasting away with only months to live, he never felt depressed about his condition because he knew that this was his time to die. There were several half-page chapters that could be interpreted as meaningless in others, but if one reads between the lines, they can interpret the message being sent by Morrie. For instance, in one chapter, Morrie told Mitch that if he could be any animal, it would be a gazelle because they are "graceful and fast." This message can be interpreted as Morrie wishing that he could still have that energy he possessed before his diagnoses.
    This book has several strengths, but with it come a few weaknesses. Anyone who loves tear-jerkers and philosophical books should consider picking up this one-of-a-kind book. This book will make anyone think back and remember that one special person who influenced them the most throughout their life. Still, young people would most likely find this book sappy and dull, as it does not connect with the young, but more with adults and the elderly. Whether it be the healthy or the unhealthy, the young or the old, this book will convince anyone that life is something that we need to love because it is all we have. As Morrie's most famous quote says: "When you learn how to die, you learn how to live."


  3. I don't read a lot for leisure but this book came highly recommended. This book touched me so strongly that I could not put it down until I was finished. I have recommended this book to others and will be buying more copies for gifts.


  4. I'm sure you've read many reviews on how touching this book is, and I would say 'to each their own'. But an entire book written about a death-bed conversation can be a bit much for some people. Think of the scene in 'The Empire Strikes Back' when Yoda is dying and speaking his last words to Luke... well now imagine that scene was the content of the entire movie and you get a sense of what it was like to read this book. The first half was touching... Morrie - an old college professor was dying, passing on his words of wisdom to his dear ex-student. Well, by the second half of the book, I just wanted him to pass away so I can finish the book and start another. I'm sorry, some may say this is blasphemy, but how many tear-jerking eye opening last words of wisdom can you really absorb? And to be honest, I can hardly remember what they were after I closed the book.


  5. Charming memoir done by a student of Morrie, now a famous sports journalist. He rediscovers his professor when he catches the tail end of a broadcast by Ted Koeppel and learns his teacher is dying but Morrie, no ordinary man, is making a study of death. Albom soon finds himself hopping a plane from Detroit to Boston every Tuesday to spend the day with his former professor as the only student in a course entitled "The Meaning of Life." Reads quickly and holds reader interest.


Read more...


Posted in Special Needs (Tuesday, May 13, 2008)

Written by Marya Hornbacher. By Houghton Mifflin. The regular list price is $25.00. Sells new for $15.24. There are some available for $15.36.
Read more...

Purchase Information
5 comments about Madness: A Bipolar Life.
  1. I liked Marya's memoir. I have read a number of biographys/memoirs of people with mental illness and what I found most unique and original about Marya's is that she really puts you IN the bipolar mind. So much so that you are taken on the ride with her, more so than is generally the case. In doing this, she has to sacrifice some clarity and details. I'm guessing she does this to make the experience more real but also because many of her experiences occurred when she was either very off balance or both off balance and drunk... so in those cases, it would be harder for her to get all the details objectively clear anyway... so rather than focus on those details or presenting those details absolutely perfectly, she seems to have decided to put you in that 'confused space' with her, so that you can really feel what she was feeling... this to me was the best part, the greatest achievement, of what Marya has created here for her readers. It is possible that some may find this jarring for the first 100 or more pages...but the final 100 pages do give more overall perspective, if that is something you are concerned about.

    Of course, being very interested, I wanted to know more, I wanted, at times, more objectivity, more details about her life, about the people around her (friends and family, etc), about the process by which she learned to write so well and do other things so well, including the magazine work. But I think she kept to a very clear purpose here. And that seemed to be, I think, to give the reader a very real honest, straightforward sense of what the bipolar mind is, how it thinks, how it hears and unnderstands and interprets, etc.... she achieved this very well...


  2. I'm a clinical social worker. As a professional I found Marya's story very compelling. I do think, however, that the writing was only fair and the book could have been edited down some (especially the sections of her hospitalizations....too much to read...too repetitive). And at times it seemed a bit chaotic and disjointed. But I think it's worth reading.


  3. This is a brilliant follow-up to Wasted. I've been reading it for less than a day and I am nearly halfway through. It's a tragedy that this book will end...


  4. I cried reading this book. While I have been diagnosed with Bipolar II, where the mania is not so severe, but the depression is, I got to see myself from the outside. Marya's pictures in to the life and mind is extrodinary.

    My husband is reading this after hearing an interview with her on the Dianne Rhem show on NPR. He said he finally knows me better than he ever has. The book is frightening, but at the same time hopeful.
    A must-read for anyone who wants to see mental illness from the inside


  5. I have some addiction issues with Klonopin and I started reading this book when I was going through some serious Klonopin withdrawal. I am not bipolar but I found this book helpful and comforting while going through my own personal madness.

    Like she says in the book, I honestly don't know how she made it through all this without killing someone (by mistake of course) or herself, accidental or intentional. It is a miracle and she is blessed to come through this. Her writing is so convincing. I really felt like I was in her head and this is how it feels to be bipolar.

    I don't know how she drank as much as she did!! I kept thinking, Wow, considering her situation she was able to travel for her book tour and become an accomplished woman.

    I hope she stays on the straight and narrow and am glad that she told her story. I feel like anyone who reads this will finally understand what it is to have mental illness. Because so many people don't understand and I know I have a very hard time explaining how I feel sometimes.


Read more...


Posted in Special Needs (Tuesday, May 13, 2008)

Written by David Sheff. By Houghton Mifflin Co. The regular list price is $24.00. Sells new for $11.19. There are some available for $11.99.
Read more...

Purchase Information
5 comments about Beautiful Boy: A Father's Journey Through His Son's Addiction.
  1. This was an excellent book from a parent's point of view concerning a child's drug addiction and the tumult that it causes in a family. It is very heart-rendering and makes a person want to step back and take a look at their own family so that you can identify the signs or signals that your children are giving off before they get over their heads in this type of a situation. Be prepared with the kleenexes when you read it!


  2. After standing in line at Starbuck's for as it seemed, over a month, I decided to purchase this book on Amazon.com. I haven't regretted it. David Sheff offers an inside look at a Father and Son and a horrible addiction. The book made me both happy and sad and at times, and gave me a stomach ache because of the drug's powerful pull. It's such a HOT topic these days. For those of you who have thought about buying this book - do it!


  3. Unfortunately the father/author spends so much time telling us about his idyllic life and self-importance that he fails at a thorough and genuine self-evaluation and revelation. I spent the time while reading the book wondering if he ever really listens (treats young Nic as a little adult and repeats the same by needing to explain Nic's addiction to his four-year old) and why he cannot give his son some space (He attends an AA meeting with his son as a gesture of support. I can only imagine what the AA group was thinking.).


  4. In the back of all our minds when our beautiful sons and daughters are born is the realization of all the evil that can be laid upon them by society and by themselves. Those adorable, cute, huggable children face step after step of hazardous life --- made especially hazardous during the teenage years when being "with it" often means being dumb.

    This book is where many of us have not gone but know we could have gone. Sheff is a courageous writer.


  5. One of the best books I have read in the last year and one of the most riveting memoirs I've read in a long, long time.

    David Sheff is able to portray the frustration, anger, angst and incredible agony of living with a loved one who is addicted without being self-serving or over dramatic.

    Each time his son disappears, your stomach drops and you are almost there with Sheff while his worry and doubt eat away at him. Each time Nic fails, you want to shout at him and each time he gets back up you want to cheer for him.

    Sheff's hope and grief come through in every chapter and you are constanly left wondering "what if?"

    But while Sheff succeeds mightily in putting you in the room with him, he doesn't wallow nor does he force his readers to wade in self pity.

    I've already ordered Tweak and I'm hoping Nic has all of the candor of his dad and even half the story-telling ability.


Read more...


Page 1 of 129
1  2  3  4  5  6  7  8  9  10  11  20  30  40  50  60  70  80  90  100  110  120  
Letters to Sam: A Grandfather's Lessons on Love, Loss, and the Gifts of Life
Wasted: A Memoir of Anorexia and Bulimia (P.S.)
It's Not About the Bike: My Journey Back to Life
A Man Named Dave: A Story of Triumph and Forgiveness
The Diving Bell and the Butterfly (Vintage International) (Vintage International)
Look Me in the Eye: My Life with Asperger's
A Child Called "It": One Child's Courage to Survive
Tuesdays with Morrie: An Old Man, a Young Man, and Life's Greatest Lesson
Madness: A Bipolar Life
Beautiful Boy: A Father's Journey Through His Son's Addiction

Copyright © 2005
*Amazon.com prices and availability subject to change.
Last updated: Tue May 13 09:59:36 EDT 2008