Rating:  Summary: Truth is stranger than Fiction Review: An interesting memoir about a man who grew up in a psychotic household, well actually two households. He moved back and forth between his crazy mother and her demented psychiatrist. He tells about his life beginning about age 11, often with raunchy details and disturbing events that make you wonder what's really happening behind the closed doors of your own neighbors. Nothing is as it appears. This book was fast-paced and kept my attention throughout as I continued to wonder how a boy growing up in this environment could later evolve into a man capable of writing such an entertaining piece of work. I was disappointed in the ending though, as it only left me still wondering. It seemed very abrupt. Maybe there will be a sequel?
Rating:  Summary: Enlightening, disturbing, funny, and a lot of other things Review: Augusten Burroughs' memoir can make you laugh, cry, and retch in various combinations. Strange and disturbing don't adequately describe Burroughs' childhood. Being raised until pre-adolescence with an alcoholic father, a bipolar mother, and a brother with Asperger's certainly did much to shape Burroughs' life, but his teenage years spent in the house of Dr. Finch, surely one of the strangest characters ever to be described in a book, constituted the bizaare formative period that gave birth to this memoir. In the Finch house, Burroughs experienced things far removed from the realm of normal childhood including pedophilia courtesy of Dr. Finch's mentally disturbed adopted son and a disgusting ritual involving retrieving Dr. Finch's stool from the toilet to be examined for divine messages. It's hard to believe that characters that would more likely arise from some imaginative writer's mind exist in real life. Thankfully, Burroughs reminds us that at least a few can emerge enlightened and successful from such twisted childhoods. My only criticism is that I felt the book's narrative flow was interrupted at the end when the author began jumping from story to story without going into enough depth with each one. Maybe he just ran out of interesting things to say. However, that's really my only criticism. The memoir is great. You'll most probably look back on your childhood with a more forgiving eye after reading about Burroughs'.
Rating:  Summary: A Classic Like "Tom Sawyer" Review: People have taken to comparing new books to past success. It can be claimed that "Secret Life of Bees" is this decade's "Color Purple" and that "My Fractured Life" is this era's "Catcher in the Rye" - and I endorse those comparisons. In comparing modern books to the classics of yesteryear, I am convinced "Running With Scissors" will come to be regarded as this decade's "Tom Sawyer." Remember Mark Twain's masterpiece was in fact considered highly rebellious in its day (a young man cons his friends, runs away from home, and befriends a slave). "Running With Scissors" pushes the envelope in that same way (teen homosexuality and drug abuse). I not only think that it can be considered our decade's "Tom Sawyer", I am convinced it will go on to become a modern classic.
Rating:  Summary: My Favorite Burroughs Book Review: Agusten Burroughs' "RUNNING WITH SCISSORS" is absolutely brilliant. From the heart breaking attempts to maintain a relationship with his damaged mother to the hollow effects of his alcoholic father, it so parallels the memoir "MY FRACTURED LIFE" from Rikki Lee Travolta it inspired me to reread the later (which in turn inspired me to reread this one). Even the pain medications and being pursued by a pedophile sing similar with the balance of funny and harrowing. "RUNNING WITH SCISSORS" is my favorite of Burroughs' books.
Rating:  Summary: One of the BEST Review: Callie Sawyer, fan of Non Fiction, Running With Scissors is a remarkable book within the memoir/biography/abuse genre. The book is all telling and yet there is a rare look at the abuse suffered with dignity and at times humor. I have read many such books. Running with Scissors compares easily to that of 'Nightmares Echo' (agree with prior reviewer),also due to the details of the book I compare it to Dry,The Privilege Of Youth, and A Million Little Pieces. In each of the afore-mentioned books you find a compelling story, sometimes sad, and sometimes they laugh within themselves at the 'luck of the draw' they got from childhood on. Yet, they never give up the fight for courage and determination.
Rating:  Summary: If memoir is your genre, this is the book for you Review: Being a fan of memoir isn't easy. There are so many memoirs, and not all of them are good. This one isn't good, it's great. It has an authenticity and wit that make it hard to put down -- not only will you laugh, but at times, you will be tempted to cry. Most of all, I appreciated how the author, indirectly, captures the dymanic of narcissism that has being running rampant in this country since the '70s. This book is completely absorbing and has my vote for Memoir Of The Year.
Rating:  Summary: Intense Subject Matter Review: Neecy Trimble, lover of nonfiction-memoirs, Though this is an extrememly intense subject matter the author does well to serve it up to us with a bit of humor. It lightens the book up a bit and yet we as readers can still see the pain behind the mask of the laughter. This is an a wonderfully well written book. Kudo's to the author for this memoir. Other memoirs with like qualities: Nightmares Echo,A Child Called It,Secret Life Of Bees,Beauty For Ashes.
Rating:  Summary: The truth is stanger than fiction.... Review: I was enthralled and scared at the same time. I have since read Burrough's book Dry, and after reading about his childhood, it's no wonder he became an alcoholic. I'm not giving the guy an excuse, but when your pyschiatrist is sicker than you, something is wrong, very wrong. If you want your dysfuntional family to appear functional, read this book. The kid under the piano is something you won't soon forget.
Rating:  Summary: Page turner, but no substance Review: The book is a memoir rather than an autobiography so it is more episodic (no pun intended) than linear and while each character is certainly colorful, there is no sense of exactly who each person is beyond a set of very weird behaviors. The author mentions a series of quirks (some funny, some very disturbing) with no foundation. Why does the family save its turkey bones and break its dishes? How long did they live outside? How many pills did he take? In the end, the people are interesting anecdotes, but I just don't care enough about them to read the sequel. For those who are looking for a memoir that seizes humor out of tragedy, I would recommend "Angela's Ashes" rather than "Running with Scissors".
Rating:  Summary: Captures the Moment Review: I really liked this book. I enjoyed the broken writing style. The frank yet nonjudgemental address of mental illness was refreshing and clear. It is easy to understand the comparisons to My Fractured Life. My ownly complaint was his childhood references to people telling him he should be a writer and him saying no. It is somehow very distracting when people who write biographies write about whether or not they will turn out to be a writer. For me, it takes me out of the moment of listening to a 13 year old narrator when he wonders if he'll end up a writer - because obviously he did or I wouldn't be reading the book. That complaint is minor though, overall I loved the book.
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