Nic currently lives in Los Angeles.
We All Fall Down: Living with Addiction
by Nic Sheff
eBook
$7.99
-
ISBN-13:
9780316175890
- Publisher: Little, Brown Books for Young Readers
- Publication date: 04/05/2011
- Sold by: Hachette Digital, Inc.
- Format: eBook
- Pages: 368
- Sales rank: 124,997
- File size: 835 KB
- Age Range: 15 - 18 Years
Available on NOOK devices and apps
Want a NOOK? Explore Now
7.99
In Stock
In his bestselling memoir Tweak, Nic Sheff took readers on an emotionally gripping roller-coaster ride through his days as a crystal meth and heroin addict. Now in this powerful follow-up about his continued efforts to stay clean, Nic writes candidly about eye-opening stays at rehab centers, devastating relapses, and hard-won realizations about what it means to be a young person living with addiction.
Customers Who Bought This Item Also Bought
-
- Tweak: Growing Up on…
- by Nic Sheff
-
- Surviving the Angel of Death:…
- by Eva KorLisa Buccieri
-
- Grief Girl
- by Erin Vincent
-
- It Happened to Nancy
- by Beatrice Sparks
-
- Three Little Words: A Memoir
- by Ashley Rhodes-Courter
-
- Med Head: My Knock-down,…
- by James PattersonHal Friedman
-
- Seventeen Real Girls,…
- by Seventeen Magazine
-
- No Choirboy: Murder, Violence,…
- by Susan Kuklin
-
- Yummy: The Last Days of a…
- by G. NeriRandy DuBurke
-
- I Don't Want To Be Crazy
- by Samantha Schutz
-
- Almost Lost: The True Story of…
- by Beatrice Sparks
-
- With Their Eyes: September…
- by Annie ThomsTaresh BatraAnna BelcTaresh Batra
-
- The Pregnancy Project: A…
- by Gaby RodriguezJenna Glatzer
Recently Viewed
Publishers Weekly
The author's second memoir begins with Sheff in an Arizona rehabilitation center after relapsing into drug use in 2005, while he was writing Tweak. After he is expelled for having a relationship with another patient, Sue Ellen, he moves in with her and attempts to stay sober, but his addictive behavior continues (he develops a brief, intense alcohol problem, snorts cocaine, steals his mother's medication, and relies on marijuana). While on tour for Tweak, Sheff feels like "a phony—a goddamn liar," since he still has to smoke marijuana to face life. The present-tense storytelling and Sheff's authentic voice will keep readers engaged, even when it's unclear where his story is going. He presents visceral images of both the gritty details of an addict's life and the desperation of a life of sobriety (" 'Cause really, what life is there to live? Working this dead-end job? Eating takeout with Sue Ellen?"). Saying a traditional 12-step approach "doesn't work for me," Sheff doesn't provide simple answers—or any answers, really—but readers will respect his ability to move forward "at my own pace." Ages 15–up. (Apr.)Mary Karr
"Nic Sheff captures the insidious, almost vampiric mind-set of an addict who shrinks from any form of light. This book has more in common with Kafka than any recovery memoir I've read."Rachel Sontag
"Sheff's journey, like his writing, is raw and compelling, heartbreaking and witty. An honest and gracious reflection about the challenges of recovery."From the Publisher
"Nic Sheff captures the insidious, almost vampiric mind-set of an addict who shrinks from any form of light. This book has more in common with Kafka than any recovery memoir I've read."—Mary Karr, New York Times bestselling author of Lit and The Liars' Club"Sheff's journey, like his writing, is raw and compelling, heartbreaking and witty. An honest and gracious reflection about the challenges of recovery."—Rachel Sontag, author of House Rules: A Memoir
School Library Journal
Gr 11 Up—In this follow-up to his debut novel Tweak (S & S, 2007), Sheff, a recovering meth addict, recounts his time in various drug rehabilitation facilities. The memoir also recounts his budding relationship with Sue Ellen and subsequent relapse back into drug use and alcoholism. Sheff is an unreliable narrator. He is constantly contradicting himself, vilifying the vaunted 12-step program and then later admitting that some elements of it work for him. He seems highly critical of rehabs and their staffs yet recognizes that they are working to try and make him better. His skewed worldview makes him difficult to relate to, but his honest and uncompromising ability to relate his emotional state makes him a tragic and eventually redeemable figure.—Ryan Donovan, New York Public LibraryKirkus Reviews
In a raw, honest and expletive-ridden narrative, 23-year-old Sheff effectively chronicles the ups and downs of trying to overcome his methamphetamine addiction and pull his life together. Fortunately, the author is not as whiny or narcissistic in this memoir as he was in his first, Tweak (2008), though he still manages to be quite unlikable and astonishingly unsympathetic. Sheff bounces in and out of two detox centers and impulsively into an ill-considered live-in relationship with a girl in Charleston, S.C. (A disclaimer at the beginning indicates that "[c]ertain names, locations, and identifying characteristics have been changed.") His good intentions are frequently thwarted by bad decisions. Frustration with a dead-end job in a coffee shop leads him to chronic alcohol consumption and pot smoking, once more testing the patience of loved ones. His frequent bouts of self-pity and rationalization, along with the constant use of "fucking" and "goddamn," quickly become tiresome. The author is forthright about the hypocrisy he feels when he speaks at schools about the dangers of drug abuse while still smoking pot daily. When he declares, "I am an asshole," it's impossible to disagree. He manages to end on a somewhat hopeful note: "I've got to hold on, is all," he says. It's painfully honest—but also painful to read, likely guaranteeing avid teen interest. (Memoir. 15 & up)