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2005 » Issue 43, Published on Wednesday, October 26, 2005 » Business
By Pam Walatka
 Image from article Clean and sober recounting of rehab

The clarity is astonishing. In “A Million Little Pieces” (Anchor/Random House, 2004), James Frey tells the story of his recovery from extreme drug and alcohol addiction. Virtually every sentence rings true. With ordinary words and short simple sentences, he weaves a fascinating story.

“I wake up to the drone of an airplane engine and the feeling of something warm dripping down my chin. I lift my hand to feel my face. My front four teeth are gone. I have a hole in my cheek, my nose is broken and my eyes are swollen nearly shut. I open them and look around and I’m in the back of a plane and there’s no one near me. I look at my clothes and my clothes are covered with a colorful mixture of spit, snot, urine, vomit and blood. I reach for the call button and find it and I push it and I wait and thirty seconds later an attendant arrives.”

“How can I help you?”

“Where am I going?”

“You don’t know?”

“No.”

That’s the opening scene. He’s on his way to rehab.

He recalls everything that happened and tells it simply, without trying to make himself look good, although he does let us see how brave he is. We watch him get two root canals without painkillers or anesthetics.

Bravo for Frey’s going ahead and doing something that scares you. He’s plenty scared by the requirements of recovery. He’s in 12-step rehab facility and he can’t stand the 12 steps. His life is broken into a million little pieces, apparently irreparably.

Frey has been compared to William S. Burroughs who also wrote brilliantly about being a rich-boy drug addict, but Burroughs took us with him to the titillating depths of his depravity, while Frey takes us with him through his recovery. There are flashbacks to his pre-rehab life, but we feel a sober mind at work.

If you are not squeamish about blood, pain, vomit, swearing, wretchedness and excessive capital letters, I highly recommend this book to you.

“A Million Little Pieces,” an Oprah’s Book Club selection and No. 1 on the New York Times paperback bestseller list, is available at Main Street Cafe & Books, 134 Main St.


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In Our Opinion

Editorial

For the first time in five years, a public elementary school, Gardner Bullis, opened its doors last week in Los Altos Hills. For some, it was, metaphorically speaking, the last stitch removed from the old wound following the closure of the original Bullis-Purissima School in 2003.

For others, including the diehards who formed the successful Bullis Charter School, the sting of the Bullis closure lingers. But our sense is that for most Hills residents not part of the Loyola School coverage area, the opening of Gardner Bullis means the resurrection of a long-sought-after neighborhood school and the community benefits that come with it.