Quitter Quitter

Quitter

A Memoir of Drinking, Relapse, and Recovery

    • 4.1 • 69 Ratings
    • $13.99

Publisher Description

"Barnett's prose style is brassy and cleareyed, with echoes of Anne Lamott." --Beth Macy, The New York Times Book Review

"Emotionally devastating and self-aware, this cautionary tale about substance abuse is a worthy heir to Cat Marnell's How to Murder Your Life." --Publishers Weekly (starred review)

A startlingly frank memoir of one woman's struggles with alcoholism and recovery, with essential new insights into addiction and treatment

Erica C. Barnett had her first sip of alcohol when she was thirteen, and she quickly developed a taste for drinking to oblivion with her friends. In her late twenties, her addiction became inescapable. Volatile relationships, blackouts, and unsuccessful stints in detox defined her life, with the vodka bottles she hid throughout her apartment and offices acting as both her tormentors and closest friends.

By the time she was in her late thirties, Erica Barnett had run the gauntlet of alcoholism. She had recovered and relapsed time and again, but after each new program or detox center would find herself far from rehabilitated. "Rock bottom," Barnett writes, "is a lie." It is always possible, she learned, to go lower than your lowest point. She found that the terms other alcoholics used to describe the trajectory of their addiction--"rock bottom" and "moment of clarity"--and the mottos touted by Alcoholics Anonymous, such as "let go and let God" and "you're only as sick as your secrets"--didn't correspond to her experience and could actually be detrimental.

With remarkably brave and vulnerable writing, Barnett expands on her personal story to confront the dire state of addiction in America, the rise of alcoholism in American women in the last century, and the lack of rehabilitation options available to addicts. At a time when opioid addiction is a national epidemic and one in twelve Americans suffers from alcohol abuse disorder, Quitter is essential reading for our age and an ultimately hopeful story of Barnett's own hard-fought path to sobriety.

GENRE
Biographies & Memoirs
RELEASED
2020
July 7
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
336
Pages
PUBLISHER
Penguin Publishing Group
SELLER
Penguin Random House LLC
SIZE
1.4
MB

Customer Reviews

Ximena37 ,

Excellent - page turner -

Raw - alcoholism laid bare. Her honesty is pure and genuine.

Yxy671118! ,

A deeply personal memoir on alcoholism ❤️

Maybe the most profound personal memoirs I have read on the baffling, cunning, and ruthless disease of alcoholism. This book serves as a reminder that alcoholism is a chronic brain disease that hijacks the brains reward systems. It is a disease of true compulsion. It will take everything from you. It also serves a reminder that relapsing is often a part of the journey to recovery. The first step is often relapsing and sometimes it might happen 100 times.

Alcoholism is real. It is not a moral failing. It is not a personal failing.

IMLP140.6 ,

Amazing

Probably one of the top 3 addiction books I have ever read. Her honest, no holds barred story of what happened was a breath of fresh air!

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