Friends, Lovers, and the Big Terrible Thing

Sprache: English

Am 2. Mai 2022 von Flatiron Books veröffentlicht.

ISBN:
978-1-250-86646-2
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(2 Besprechungen)

In an extraordinary story that only he could tell, Matthew Perry takes readers onto the soundstage of the most successful sitcom of all time while opening up about his private struggles with addiction. Candid, self-aware, and told with his trademark humor, Perry vividly details his lifelong battle with the disease and what fueled it despite seemingly having it all.

Friends, Lovers, and the Big Terrible Thing is an unforgettable memoir that shares the most intimate details of the love Perry lost, his darkest days, and his greatest friends.

Unflinchingly honest, moving, and hilarious: this is the book fans have been waiting for. [Dust jacket copy]

5 Auflagen

A Whole Lotta Bullshit

This is neither well-written, nor truthful. Sure, there's tidbits of Perry's life here and there, but Perry is fundamentally unable to tell himself the truth, so he's unable to write a memoir that isn't bullshit. It's full of just-so stories. It's full of the same sort of whistling in the dark that addicts tell themselves is truth so that they can sound like the people who they think have made it. And he omits key details of most of the incidents in his life, so one rehab is all jumbled up with another, one job is indistinguishable from another, and one girlfriend is (mostly) similar to every other.

Textbook confirmation of every horrible thing you've ever suspected about celebrities

Keine Bewertung

2022 reads, #54. So, the latest tell-all celebrity trainwreck memoir is here, this time from Friends star Matthew Perry, who turns out to have spent by his reckoning approximately seven million dollars over the years on rehab facilities and their associated private plane rides to and fro, to feed an uncontrollable liquor and opioid addiction that by all rights should've killed him several years ago (or at least according to the horrific tale that begins the book, in which his colon literally explodes, he goes into a coma for three days, and his family is told that he has an only 2% chance of surviving). The good news here is that it's clear Perry wrote this himself, versus the usual celebrity route of handing off a box of dictaphone tapes to some anonymous ghostwriter schmuck in Echo Park; but unfortunately the way you can tell this is that Perry's prose …

Themen

  • Memoir
  • Addiction
  • Hollywood
  • Celebrities