Reviews tagging 'Alcoholism'

Down the Drain by Julia Fox

215 reviews

dark sad tense medium-paced

Memoirs are always the best as audiobooks. This book was crazy,  so heartbreakingly sad at times and so honest. Definitely a great listen! 

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dark emotional sad tense

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adventurous challenging dark emotional funny hopeful inspiring reflective sad tense fast-paced

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I feel like I break out into a cold sweat every time I listen to this. Might finish at a later time, just not the vibe right now.

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dark reflective fast-paced

julia please some introspection I beg of you

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As far as memoirs go, this is book is just a telling of events without an ounce of introspection on Julia Fox' as a person. This is the first book I stopped reading this year. 

I admit that I don't know anything about her, and I've only heard her name once or twice. but even 70% into the book didn't give me a speck of who she is. There's no introspection that could explain her choices and actions. So, as a reader, I can only see her as a person who has a poor upbringing brought upon by neglectful parents, and so, she went through a lot in life. 

That's my whole takeaway from this memoir, that growing up with bad people around you, especially neglectful and abusive parents play a significant role in shaping and molding your personhood. In Julia's case, she lived a thousand lives surrounded by all sorts of bad influence. 

I had highlighted so many bad and terrible moments inflicted by her parents, friends and even herself in red that it's concerning. I was alarmed by how much she went through. But without introspection, she comes across poorly from my perspective. I don't care for the cruel and terrible people that were introduced because I don't need to justify their actions. But for a memoir, she leaves no explanation for her own decisions and choices which lead to bad influences in return. 

It was always, "I had sex with...", "I did drugs...", "I went to...", "I did..." without giving any reason. When the book did, it's a therapist diagnosing her as bipolar. But I think that makes for a poor justification for her. To me, without any reason outside her diagnosis, she doesn't hold herself accountable. Therefore, it appears like she's okay and entitled to being mean and cruel and a bad influence on others as well. 

So, this is not a memoir. This is just a telling of events.

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Opioid use was graphic towards the end of the book. 

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