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BCR
Book Club
Exploring life through reading, friendship
and drink! |
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Million
Little Pieces
About the Book:
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A Million Little Pieces
By James Frey
"Imagine waking up on a plane. You have
no idea where you have been or where you are
going, you have no memory of the preceding two
weeks." "Imagine that your front four teeth have
been knocked out, your nose is broken, and there
is a gash on your cheek. Imagine that you have
no wallet, no money, no job." "Imagine the
police in three states are looking for you."
"Imagine that you have been an alcoholic for ten
years and a crack addict for three. What would
you do? What would you do?" When he entered a
residential treatment center at the age of
twenty-three, James Frey had destroyed his body
and his mind almost beyond repair. He faced a
stark choice: accept that he wasn't going to see
twenty-four or step into the fallout of his
smoking wreck of a life and take drastic action.
Surrounded by patients as troubled as he -
including a judge, a mobster, a former
world-champion boxer, and a fragile former
prostitute - and a droning dogma of How to
Recover, Frey had to fight to find his own way
to confront the consequences of the life he had
lived so far, and to determine what future, if
any, he holds. A Million Little Pieces is an
uncommonly genuine account of a life destroyed
and a life reconstructed. |
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Our Votes:
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| Lisa:
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| Ruth: |
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| Kate: |
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| Betty |
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| Deb |
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| Veranda: |
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| Twyla: |
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Discussion Questions
1. A Million Little Pieces
presents some unusual formal innovations:
Instead of using quotation marks, each piece
of dialogue is set off on its own line with
only occasional authorial indications of who
is speaking; paragraphs are not indented;
sentences sometimes run together without
punctuation; and many passages read more
like poetry than prose. How do these
innovations affect the pace of the writing?
How do they contribute to the book's rawness
and immediacy? How is James Frey's
unconventional style appropriate for this
story?
2. A Million Little Pieces is a nonfiction
memoir, but does it also read like a novel?
How does Frey create suspense and sustain
narrative tension throughout? What major
questions are raised and left unresolved
until the end of the book? Is this way of
writing about addiction more powerful than
an objective study might be?
3. Why does the Tao Te Ching speak to James
so powerfully? Why does he connect with it
whereas the Bible and Twelve Steps
literature leave him cold? How is this
little book of ancient Chinese wisdom
relevant to the issues an addict must face?
4. James is frequently torn between wanting
to look into his own eyes to see himself
completely and being afraid of what he might
find: "I want to look beneath the surface of
the pale green and see what's inside of me,
what's within me, what I'm hiding. I start
to look up but I turn away. I try to force
myself but I can't" [p. 32]. Why can't James
look himself in the eye? Why is it important
that he do so? What finally enables him to
see himself?
5. When his brother Bob tells James he has
to get better, James replies, "I don't know
what happened or how I ever ended up like
this, but I did, and I've got some huge
fucking problems and I don't know if they're
fixable. I don't know if I'm fixable" [p.
131]. Does the book ever fully reveal the
causes of James's addictions? How and why do
you think he ended up "like this"?
6. Why are James and Lilly so drawn to each
other? In what way is their openness with
each other significant for their recovery?
7. Joanne calls James the most stubborn
person she has ever met. At what moments in
the book does that stubbornness reveal
itself most strongly? How does being
stubborn help James? How does it hurt or
hinder him?
8. The counselors at the clinic insist that
the Twelve Steps program is the only way
addicts can stay sober. What are James's
reasons for rejecting it? Are they reasons
that might be applicable to others or are
they only relevant to James's own
personality and circumstances? Is he right
in thinking that a lifetime of "sitting in
Church basements listening to People whine
and bitch and complain" is nothing more than
"the replacement of one addiction with
another" [p. 223]?
9. What are the sources of James's rage and
self-hatred? How do these feelings affect
his addictions? How does James use physical
pain as an outlet for his fury?
10. How is Frey able to make the life of an
addict so viscerally and vividly real? Which
passages in the book most powerfully evoke
what it's like to be an addict? Why is it
important, for the overall impact of the
book, that Frey accurately convey these
feelings?
11. When Miles asks James for something that
might help him, James thinks it's funny that
a Federal Judge is asking him for advice, to
which Miles replies: "We are all the same in
here. Judge or Criminal, Bourbon Drinker or
Crackhead" [p. 271]. How does being a
recovering addict in the clinic negate
social and moral differences? In what
emotional and practical ways are the
friendships James develops, especially with
Miles and Leonard, crucial to his recovery?
12. James refuses to see himself as a
victim; or to blame his parents, his genes,
his environment, or even the severe physical
and emotional pain he suffered as a child
from untreated ear infections for his
addictions and destructive behavior. He
blames only himself for what has happened in
his life. What cultural currents does this
position swim against? How does taking full
responsibility for his actions help James?
How might finding someone else to blame have
held him back?
13. Bret Easton Ellis, in describing A
Million Little Pieces, commented, "Beneath
the brutality of James Frey's painful
process, there are simple gestures of
kindness that will reduce even the most
jaded to tears." What are some of those
moments of kindness and compassion and
genuine human connection that make the book
so moving? Why do these moments have such
emotional power?
14. In what ways does A Million Little
Pieces illuminate the problem of alcohol and
drug addiction in the United States today?
What does Frey's intensely personal voice
add to the national debate about this issue? |
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