Never Enough: A Way Through Addiction
Autor Barney Hoskynsen Limba Engleză Paperback – 22 feb 2018
'An unblinking account of living with - and more importantly, beyond - addiction. Brave, clear-eyed and inspiring' John Niven
'A rich, uplifting memoir: Hoskyns portrays how painful inadequacy, masked by drugs, can be replaced by the messiness of ordinary life' Oliver James
A few months after graduating with a 1st class honours degree from Oxford University, Barney Hoskyns sat in a damp Clapham basement and asked his best friend to inject him with heroin. From that moment on, for the next three years, Hoskyns is hopelessly hooked. This is the searingly honest story of what brought him to this place - and how he got himself out of it.
Barney Hoskyns is one of the leading music writers of our time: his books have ranged the musical landscape from Led Zeppelin to Tom Waits, from Laurel Canyon to Woodstock. His articles have appeared in NME, Melody Maker, Rolling Stone and Vogue, and in 2000 he founded Rock's Backpages.
Hoskyns beautifully describes the relationship between music and addiction, between love and infatuation. Never Enough is Hoskyns's raw, uncompromising and utterly compelling account of the highs and lows of life under the needle. Interspersed with photos and diary entries, Hosykns examines why he so willingly gave himself up to the death-grip of heroin, and what it took to finally free himself from it.
Preț: 62.30 lei
Preț vechi: 87.86 lei
-29%
Puncte Express: 93
Preț estimativ în valută:
11.01€ • 13.09$ • 9.56£
11.01€ • 13.09$ • 9.56£
Carte indisponibilă temporar
Doresc să fiu notificat când acest titlu va fi disponibil:
Se trimite...
Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781472125552
ISBN-10: 147212555X
Pagini: 176
Ilustrații: B+w integrated photographs
Dimensiuni: 130 x 199 x 14 mm
Greutate: 0.17 kg
Editura: Little Brown
Colecția Constable
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 147212555X
Pagini: 176
Ilustrații: B+w integrated photographs
Dimensiuni: 130 x 199 x 14 mm
Greutate: 0.17 kg
Editura: Little Brown
Colecția Constable
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Recenzii
Elegantly written, almost poetic at times, his (Hoskyns) book analyses the cause and effect of addiction and its vice-like grip on the body and mind
The music critic's journey is filled with the beautiful as much as the damned ... replete with insight into the price of cool and the infatuations that can tear us all apart
A powerful ... recollection of these lost years: vivid, impressionistic ... an ambitious, intelligent book
A completely compelling memoir of addiction and redemption. Hoskyns has taken a highly personal subject and created a bold and rewarding account in which we may all find purpose and value
A brilliantly-written memoir about the long route to freedom - a treatise on living and dying in an addictive and compulsive culture
Never Enough, the fierce, unflinching memoir of addiction and recovery by Barney Hoskyns, is really something
Hoskyns's artful, intense Never Enough describes his all-consuming heroin addiction at NME, as well as his subsequent 30-year flight from it
Erudite and ruminative memoir . . . his writing is worth savouring . . . Never Enough is substantial and satisfying
'An ambitious, intelligent book' Observer
Three decades after quitting Class A drugs, Barney Hoskyns looks back - in sorrow and wonder rather than anger - at the addiction that gripped him for five years of his life.
Seeking to understand the forces that pushed him to destroy himself in his early twenties - and quoting from his journal entries in and after those years - Hoskyns tells the story of his drug use and its denouement: a slow journey out of darkness towards emotional and spiritual health. Central to the narrative is his account of an obsessive love affair that drove him to seek oblivion through heroin and cocaine.
This is not a war story. Rather, it's an effort to make sense of addiction as a condition: to see how it manifests not only in the individual but in society as a whole. Drawing on over 30 years without chemicals, Hoskyns explores the full implications of what M. Scott Peck called 'the sacred disease' and attempts to explain it from a new and holistic perspective.
Pulling together strands of dependency, decadence and self-hatred - and the parallel addiction that is sexual obsession - Never Enough is profoundly personal and discursively philosophical: an extrapolation from the particular to the general that speaks to the human condition of us all.
'Elegantly written, almost poetic at times' Mail on Sunday
'Artful, intense' Q
The music critic's journey is filled with the beautiful as much as the damned ... replete with insight into the price of cool and the infatuations that can tear us all apart
A powerful ... recollection of these lost years: vivid, impressionistic ... an ambitious, intelligent book
A completely compelling memoir of addiction and redemption. Hoskyns has taken a highly personal subject and created a bold and rewarding account in which we may all find purpose and value
A brilliantly-written memoir about the long route to freedom - a treatise on living and dying in an addictive and compulsive culture
Never Enough, the fierce, unflinching memoir of addiction and recovery by Barney Hoskyns, is really something
Hoskyns's artful, intense Never Enough describes his all-consuming heroin addiction at NME, as well as his subsequent 30-year flight from it
Erudite and ruminative memoir . . . his writing is worth savouring . . . Never Enough is substantial and satisfying
'An ambitious, intelligent book' Observer
Three decades after quitting Class A drugs, Barney Hoskyns looks back - in sorrow and wonder rather than anger - at the addiction that gripped him for five years of his life.
Seeking to understand the forces that pushed him to destroy himself in his early twenties - and quoting from his journal entries in and after those years - Hoskyns tells the story of his drug use and its denouement: a slow journey out of darkness towards emotional and spiritual health. Central to the narrative is his account of an obsessive love affair that drove him to seek oblivion through heroin and cocaine.
This is not a war story. Rather, it's an effort to make sense of addiction as a condition: to see how it manifests not only in the individual but in society as a whole. Drawing on over 30 years without chemicals, Hoskyns explores the full implications of what M. Scott Peck called 'the sacred disease' and attempts to explain it from a new and holistic perspective.
Pulling together strands of dependency, decadence and self-hatred - and the parallel addiction that is sexual obsession - Never Enough is profoundly personal and discursively philosophical: an extrapolation from the particular to the general that speaks to the human condition of us all.
'Elegantly written, almost poetic at times' Mail on Sunday
'Artful, intense' Q