Million Little Pieces

So, working in a bookstore has been exceptionally bad for my wallet... I've been buying books like crazy, and often I buy the bestsellers so i can make recommendations like a good little employee.

Although it's not usually my kind of book, we've been selling out of Million Little Pieces (by James Frey) like it's going out of style. Because it's been so popular, I ganked a copy from teh last shipment and just finished it.

It's a memoir, basically, about the author's six-week stint at a rehab center, recovering from multiple addictions to drugs and alcohol that had been ongoing for well over 10 years. The narrative is exceptionally gritty and doesn't pull any punches. The book itself was fascinating, from the perspective of someone like me who's been relatively sheltered and is still somewhat naiive about these things.

Has anyone else read it yet? If that kind thing appeals, I'd reccommend it. It was an awesome book.

Blackrabbit 20 years ago
So, working in a bookstore has been exceptionally bad for my wallet... I've been buying books like crazy, and often I buy the bestsellers so i can make recommendations like a good little employee.

Although it's not usually my kind of book, we've been selling out of Million Little Pieces (by James Frey) like it's going out of style. Because it's been so popular, I ganked a copy from teh last shipment and just finished it.

It's a memoir, basically, about the author's six-week stint at a rehab center, recovering from multiple addictions to drugs and alcohol that had been ongoing for well over 10 years. The narrative is exceptionally gritty and doesn't pull any punches. The book itself was fascinating, from the perspective of someone like me who's been relatively sheltered and is still somewhat naiive about these things.

Has anyone else read it yet? If that kind thing appeals, I'd reccommend it. It was an awesome book.
Sarah 20 years ago
I saw the Oprah show about him. It seems like an interesting read, but I worry about how my psyche will react to reading the graphic details of going through detox. Nightmares are so not my idea of fun.

He is a strong man. Coming out of a state where they were not sure how his body was even function at it's state of damage, to becoming an advocate for staying, geting and remaining drug free.
Sarah 20 years ago
I saw the Oprah show about him. It seems like an interesting read, but I worry about how my psyche will react to reading the graphic details of going through detox. Nightmares are so not my idea of fun.

He is a strong man. Coming out of a state where they were not sure how his body was even function at it's state of damage, to becoming an advocate for staying, geting and remaining drug free.
Blackrabbit 20 years ago
I had to put it down several times and take a break. I was amazed at the fortitude the guy showed though. Really really impressive, all the more so because it's not made up.
Blackrabbit 20 years ago
I had to put it down several times and take a break. I was amazed at the fortitude the guy showed though. Really really impressive, all the more so because it's not made up.
Verileah 20 years ago
I've heard I really ought to read this one. Perhaps I shall pick it up on my next book binge :X
Rainee 20 years ago
I read that while I was doing my stint of working at a bookstore. Fascinating book, didn't take me long at all to finish it. Course I read it soon after it came out.... way before it was "known" at all.

And yea rabbit, working in a bookstore is evil on the wallet :P I survived by using my store's employee checkout program.. where could take books home for up to 2 weeks. Was supposed to be just hardbacks, but I got away w/ checking out whatever I wanted. Was a wonderful way to try out different authors w/out spending a fortune :)
Blackrabbit 20 years ago
We do that. /grins, sounds like you worked at the same store as me! But I prefer to buy books to re-read.

Working on My Friend Leonard now, also by Frey. Reading one by Bernard Cornwell as well, a historical fiction I forget the name of... it's across the room. Too... lazy... to get it...
Rainee 20 years ago
I buy ones I really enjoy so I can re-read them later... but if I bought every book I've ever read, not only would I be broke, I'd have nowhere to put them! :lol

I've fallen in love with used bookstores. Not only is it cheaper than new, it's sorta recycling :P They're even better for peeps that only want to read hardbacks. Personally I prefer paperback... travels easier... and cheaper if can't find used hehe.
Sergon 20 years ago
My girlfriend read this one and had to put it down several times due to shock and awe. She was like "Im never drinking again". The I would go "Want another Glass of wine" :)

She enjoyed it though.

S
Rainee 20 years ago
Interesting... http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20060109/ap_on_en_ot/books_disputed_memoir;_ylt=AkF9whav608_vCmebMBC5ues0NUE;_ylu=X3oDMTA3ODdxdHBhBHNlYwM5NjQ-

'A Million Little Pieces' Facts Disputed By HILLEL ITALIE, AP National Writer
2 hours, 50 minutes ago



An investigative Web site has alleged that James Frey's best-selling memoir about substance abuse, "A Million Little Pieces," wildly exaggerates his past, with inflated claims about his criminal record and about his involvement in an accident that killed two high school students.

"Police reports, court records, interviews with law enforcement personnel, and other sources have put the lie to many key sections of Frey's book," according to an article posted Sunday on http://www.thesmokinggun.com.

Frey, whose memoir became a huge hit after Oprah Winfrey selected it last fall for her book club, has threatened to sue The Smoking Gun. His lawyer, Martin D. Singer, was not immediately available for comment Monday.

The book's hardcover publisher, Doubleday, and paperback publisher, Anchor, said in a joint statement Monday, "We stand in support of our author, James Frey, and his book which has touched the lives of millions of readers." A spokeswoman for Frey, Jennifer Hayman, referred to the publishers' statement when asked for comment by The Associated Press.

On his web site, http://bigjimindustries.com, Frey dismissed the story as "the latest investigation into my past, and the latest attempt to discredit me."

"So let the haters hate, let the doubters doubt, I stand by my book, and my life, Frey wrote.

Frey was interviewed by The Smoking Gun and "did, for the first time, admit that he had embellished central details of his criminal career and purported incarceration for `obvious dramatic reasons' in the nonfiction work," according to the publication.

"He also admitted to taking steps, around the time `A Million Little Pieces' was published in hardcover in 2003, to legally expunge court records related to the seemingly most egregious criminal activity of his lifetime."

The memoir has captivated millions of readers, including Winfrey, with its story of violence, addiction and recovery. Much of this is questioned by The Smoking Gun, notably a 1986 car wreck in Michigan's St. Joseph Township that killed Jane Hall and Melissa Sanders, fellow students of Frey's at St. Joseph High School.

In Frey's book, he writes that he was close friends with "Michelle" (which, he acknowledged to The Smoking Gun, was a pseudonym for Sanders) and had been with her on the night of the accident. Sanders had been asked out by another student, Dean Sperlik, but, fearing she wouldn't be allowed, told her parents that she was going to the movies with Frey.

At the movies, he recalls, Sanders met up with Sperlik, who drove off with Sanders (Hall is not mentioned in the book), only to be slammed by an oncoming train at the railroad crossing. Sanders was killed and Sperlik was seriously injured.

As the person who enabled Sanders to be out that night, Frey says he was questioned by police and recalls being blamed for the tragedy by Sanders' parents and by her friends. "I took a lot of punches ... and every time I threw a punch back, and I threw one back every single time, I threw it back for her," he writes.

But his memories were disputed — by the police report, by the chief police investigator and by Sanders' parents, both of whom could not recall his being close to Melissa, being with her that night or being blamed for the accident.

"Everything that I believe he wrote, even about my daughter ... was not an actual, the way the accident happened or anything," Marianne Sanders told The Smoking Gun. "I never heard his name in connection with it."

Other memoirs have been questioned in recent years, including "Fragments of a Childhood 1939-1948," a Holocaust memoir by Binjamin Wilkomirski, and Tony Hendra's "Father Joe," about the author's troubled past and the priest who helped him recover. Publishers have acknowledged they don't fact check memoirs, relying instead on the author.

Frey recently signed a two-book deal with Riverhead Books, an imprint of Penguin Group (USA). The executive editor at Riverhead, Sean McDonald, also edited Frey's "A Million Little Pieces" at Doubleday. McDonald did not immediately return messages from the AP seeking comment.

Frey, who also wrote the memoir "My Friend Leonard," is scheduled to release a novel with Riverhead in fall 2007.

Blackrabbit 20 years ago
I recall wondering how much of it was exaggeration when I read it. But regardless, it was a good book and it's too bad folks can't just take it at face value.

Incidentally, My Friend Leonard is selling like no tomorrow. I can't get my damn hands on a copy because we can't keep 'em on the shelves.