Selasa, 16 September 2014

** Download PDF Running with Scissors: A Memoir, by Augusten Burroughs

Download PDF Running with Scissors: A Memoir, by Augusten Burroughs

The means to obtain this publication Running With Scissors: A Memoir, By Augusten Burroughs is extremely simple. You could not go for some places and also spend the time to just discover the book Running With Scissors: A Memoir, By Augusten Burroughs As a matter of fact, you might not constantly obtain guide as you want. Yet right here, only by search and discover Running With Scissors: A Memoir, By Augusten Burroughs, you could get the listings of guides that you truly expect. Sometimes, there are several publications that are showed. Those books certainly will impress you as this Running With Scissors: A Memoir, By Augusten Burroughs compilation.

Running with Scissors: A Memoir, by Augusten Burroughs

Running with Scissors: A Memoir, by Augusten Burroughs



Running with Scissors: A Memoir, by Augusten Burroughs

Download PDF Running with Scissors: A Memoir, by Augusten Burroughs

Find a lot more encounters and knowledge by reading guide qualified Running With Scissors: A Memoir, By Augusten Burroughs This is a book that you are looking for, right? That corrects. You have actually pertained to the best site, after that. We consistently give you Running With Scissors: A Memoir, By Augusten Burroughs and also the most preferred books in the world to download and also took pleasure in reading. You might not dismiss that seeing this set is a purpose and even by unintended.

It is not secret when connecting the creating skills to reading. Reviewing Running With Scissors: A Memoir, By Augusten Burroughs will make you get even more sources as well as sources. It is a manner in which can enhance just how you ignore as well as recognize the life. By reading this Running With Scissors: A Memoir, By Augusten Burroughs, you can more than exactly what you get from other book Running With Scissors: A Memoir, By Augusten Burroughs This is a widely known publication that is released from renowned author. Seen type the writer, it can be relied on that this publication Running With Scissors: A Memoir, By Augusten Burroughs will give lots of inspirations, about the life as well as experience as well as every little thing inside.

You might not should be doubt regarding this Running With Scissors: A Memoir, By Augusten Burroughs It is simple way to obtain this publication Running With Scissors: A Memoir, By Augusten Burroughs You can just check out the established with the web link that we supply. Here, you can acquire the book Running With Scissors: A Memoir, By Augusten Burroughs by on the internet. By downloading Running With Scissors: A Memoir, By Augusten Burroughs, you can find the soft data of this book. This is the exact time for you to start reading. Even this is not printed book Running With Scissors: A Memoir, By Augusten Burroughs; it will precisely give more advantages. Why? You could not bring the printed publication Running With Scissors: A Memoir, By Augusten Burroughs or pile the book in your property or the office.

You could finely include the soft data Running With Scissors: A Memoir, By Augusten Burroughs to the gizmo or every computer unit in your workplace or residence. It will aid you to always continue reviewing Running With Scissors: A Memoir, By Augusten Burroughs every time you have extra time. This is why, reading this Running With Scissors: A Memoir, By Augusten Burroughs does not offer you troubles. It will provide you essential sources for you which intend to start creating, blogging about the comparable publication Running With Scissors: A Memoir, By Augusten Burroughs are various book area.

Running with Scissors: A Memoir, by Augusten Burroughs

Now including an excerpt from Lust & Wonder, a new memoir coming in March 2016.

Running with Scissors is the true story of a boy whose mother (a poet with delusions of Anne Sexton) gave him away to be raised by her psychiatrist, a dead-ringer for Santa and a lunatic in the bargain. Suddenly, at age twelve, Augusten Burroughs found himself living in a dilapidated Victorian in perfect squalor. The doctor's bizarre family, a few patients, and a pedophile living in the backyard shed completed the tableau. Here, there were no rules, there was no school. The Christmas tree stayed up until summer, and Valium was eaten like Pez. And when things got dull, there was always the vintage electroshock therapy machine under the stairs....

Running with Scissors is at turns foul and harrowing, compelling and maniacally funny. But above all, it chronicles an ordinary boy's survival under the most extraordinary circumstances.

  • Sales Rank: #37129 in eBooks
  • Published on: 2010-04-01
  • Released on: 2010-04-01
  • Format: Kindle eBook

Amazon.com Review
There is a passage early in Augusten Burroughs's harrowing and highly entertaining memoir, Running with Scissors, that speaks volumes about the author. While going to the garbage dump with his father, young Augusten spots a chipped, glass-top coffee table that he longs to bring home. "I knew I could hide the chip by fanning a display of magazines on the surface, like in a doctor's office," he writes, "And it certainly wouldn't be dirty after I polished it with Windex for three hours." There were certainly numerous chips in the childhood Burroughs describes: an alcoholic father, an unstable mother who gives him up for adoption to her therapist, and an adolescence spent as part of the therapist's eccentric extended family, gobbling prescription meds and fooling around with both an old electroshock machine and a pedophile who lives in a shed out back. But just as he dreamed of doing with that old table, Burroughs employs a vigorous program of decoration and fervent polishing to a life that many would have simply thrown in a landfill. Despite her abandonment, he never gives up on his increasingly unbalanced mother. And rather than despair about his lot, he glamorizes it: planning a "beauty empire" and performing an a capella version of "You Light Up My Life" at a local mental ward. Burroughs's perspective achieves a crucial balance for a memoir: emotional but not self-involved, observant but not clinical, funny but not deliberately comic. And it's ultimately a feel-good story: as he steers through a challenging childhood, there's always a sense that Burroughs's survivor mentality will guide him through and that the coffee table will be salvaged after all. --John Moe

From Publishers Weekly
"Bookman gave me attention. We would go for long walks and talk about all sorts of things. Like how awful the nuns were in his Catholic school when he was a kid and how you have to roll your lips over your teeth when you give a blowjob," writes Burroughs (Sellevision) about his affair, at age 13, with the 33-year-old son of his mother's psychiatrist. That his mother sent him to live with her shrink (who felt that the affair was good therapy for Burroughs) shows that this is not just another 1980s coming-of-age story. The son of a poet with a "wild mental imbalance" and a professor with a "pitch-black dark side," Burroughs is sent to live with Dr. Finch when his parents separate and his mother comes out as a lesbian. While life in the Finch household is often overwhelming (the doctor talks about masturbating to photos of Golda Meir while his wife rages about his adulterous behavior), Burroughs learns "your life [is] your own and no adult should be allowed to shape it for you." There are wonderful moments of paradoxical humor Burroughs, who accepts his homosexuality as a teen, rejects the squeaky-clean pop icon Anita Bryant because she was "tacky and classless" as well as some horrifying moments, as when one of Finch's daughters has a semi-breakdown and thinks that her cat has come back from the dead. Beautifully written with a finely tuned sense of style and wit the occasional clich‚ ("Life would be fabric-softener, tuna-salad-on-white, PTA-meeting normal") stands out anomalously this memoir of a nightmarish youth is both compulsively entertaining and tremendously provocative.
Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information, Inc.

From Library Journal
This memoir by Burroughs is certainly unique; among other adventures, he recounts how his mother's psychiatrist took her to a motel for therapy, while at home the kids chopped a hole in the roof to make the kitchen brighter. Not all craziness, though, this account reveals the feelings of sadness and dislocation this unusual upbringing brought upon Burroughs and his friends. His early family life was characterized by his parents' break-and-destroy fights, and after his parents separated, his mother practically abandoned Burroughs in hopes of achieving fame as a poet. At 12, he went to live with the family (and a few patients) of his mother's psychiatrist. At the doctor's home, children did as they wished: they skipped school, ate whatever they wanted, engaged in whatever sexual adventures came along, and trashed the house and everything in it, while the mother watched TV and occasionally dusted. Burroughs has written an entertaining yet horrifying account that isn't for the squeamish: the scatological content and explicit homosexual episodes may limit its appeal. Recommended for the adventurous seeking an unsettling experience among the grotesque. Nancy R. Ives, SUNY at Geneseo
Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Most helpful customer reviews

161 of 174 people found the following review helpful.
Disturbingly honest--and disturbingly funny
By D. Cloyce Smith
When he was a teenager in Massachusetts during the 1970s, Augusten Burroughs kept daily journals recording everything that happened to him. "Running with Scissors" is a result of those journals, but it's unlikely that anyone who suffered experiences like his would need a journal to recall them. Instead, his diaries both gave him the therapeutic outlet he needed while growing up and supplied this book with the rich detail that makes it, at times, so unbelievable.

Burrough's mother was a struggling poet who wanted to be like Anne Sexton, and, lacking any talent, she instead suffered Sexton's psychotic episodes. The father, unable to deal with his wife's instability, drank himself out of the relationship. Eventually, Burroughs is abandoned by his family and adopted by his mother's psychiatrist, a certifiable lunatic who dispenses drugs and sex far more diligently than sound advice and who believes discipline is an evil to be avoided at all costs. To complicate an already disastrous situation, other members of this adopted family include several deeply disturbed individuals, including a pedophile who finds a ready victim in the 14-year-old Burroughs.

I read this book two months ago, and, while I found it simultaneously appalling and enjoyable, I didn't know what to make of it. Since then, I've read several press reports that address some of the rumors generated by this book's publication. No, none of the people described in this book have sued (or threatened to sue) the author for libel. True, no child with the name "Augusten Burroughs" ever lived anywhere near Northampton--because Burroughs legally changed his name when he was 18. In sum, I've read nothing to indicate that Burroughs is making it all up.

Yet there are two criticisms of the book I don't understand. Unfortunately for Burroughs, the back cover includes a single blurb comparing him to David Sedaris, and many readers, unable to think for themselves, contrast the two authors and find Burroughs lacking. Other than being gay and funny (and it's insulting that that is all it takes for people to link the two authors), Burroughs and Sedaris have nothing in common--each has his own writing style and a unique sense of humor. It would be just as pertinent to compare him to Ru Paul.

The second criticism is that Burroughs reproduces conversations verbatim from thirty years ago. Putting aside the fact that he was able to consult diaries to refresh his memory, this technique is not uncommon. J. R. Ackerley, Annie Dillard, and Philip Roth--to name just three I've read recently--all use the same conceit in their classic memoirs. Burroughs is not as good as these three writers--his prose is a bit austere, and the book teeters on the edge of John Waters-inspired camp. Nevertheless, criticism of "recreated" dialogue seems gratuitous: any detail in any autobiography can be censured on the same grounds. Burroughs quite successfully recreates for the reader certain episodes of his life--episodes no human being would have been able to forget--and the exact wording of recalled dialogue matters as much as the exact color of the polyester shirt he was wearing at the time.

Regardless of its faults (both real and alleged), the book is vivid proof that Burroughs emerged from his past with a profound sense of dignity. In a recent interview, he said of the older man who sexually abused him: "Mostly I still feel an incredible rage that he would do that to a young person, but just as much as I feel that rage I feel sorry for him, because he was someone who was mentally ill and had the most atrocious therapist possible." This quote alone displays his uncanny ability to step back and reflect detachedly on his experiences and to be both empathetic and sympathetic even towards those who deserve his venom. Some readers will be disturbed by Burroughs's ability to laugh (and make us laugh) at what happened to him. Yet the book probably would have unbearable otherwise--and, if it weren't for his sense of humor, it's unlikely the author would be around to tell us his story at all.

73 of 79 people found the following review helpful.
Could anyone's life BE any stranger!!!
By Karen Kirsch
I saw the cover and chuckled, thinking, aw, this will be a cute story. My God, how wrong was I? Augusten Burroughs writes a memoir of his young years growing up in not only one, but two totally disfunctional households. His parents despise each other and you begin to wonder on which page one might kill the other.
Mom is totally dependent on her psychiatrist, spending endless hours with him. He is portrayed as a Santa Claus-type person...
a right jolly old elf. When Augusten is left to stay with psychiatrist and family, we are plunged into a household that goes WAY beyond bizarre! You really have to read it to believe it. I honestly looked at his picture on the back cover at least
20 times while reading the book wondering how this guy could look so normal after what he had been through!
This is one mind-blowing read. I was so intrigued by his story that I went on NPR's web-site to listen to his interviews.
Gosh, he sounds so grounded...and yet how could it be?

353 of 401 people found the following review helpful.
Disturbingly hilarious
By Westley
I found myself laughing hysterically at this book while simultaneously shaking my head in horror. It's the story of Burrough's life from the age of roughly 13 to 16. Burrough's lived a middle-classed life, but the people around him were gradually losing it. His mother began to have "psychotic breaks" (although it sounds like she may have had bipolar disorder) and hooked up with a bizarre psychiatrist - Dr. Finch. Soon, every aspect of their lives are touched by Dr. Finch and his equally bizarre family. At times, the events are horrifying, such as Burrough's molestation by Dr. Finch's adopted son. Remarkably, Burrough's manages to find the humor even in these situations. People are likely to compare Burrough's to another gay humorist, David Sedaris; however, Burrough's stories are far darker than those of Sedaris, although both of them write great funny stories. This book was a tremendously quick read, and I laughed out loud more than any recent book I've read. Highly recommended on that basis, but some readers are likely to be highly offended by some of the content.

See all 1362 customer reviews...

Running with Scissors: A Memoir, by Augusten Burroughs PDF
Running with Scissors: A Memoir, by Augusten Burroughs EPub
Running with Scissors: A Memoir, by Augusten Burroughs Doc
Running with Scissors: A Memoir, by Augusten Burroughs iBooks
Running with Scissors: A Memoir, by Augusten Burroughs rtf
Running with Scissors: A Memoir, by Augusten Burroughs Mobipocket
Running with Scissors: A Memoir, by Augusten Burroughs Kindle

** Download PDF Running with Scissors: A Memoir, by Augusten Burroughs Doc

** Download PDF Running with Scissors: A Memoir, by Augusten Burroughs Doc

** Download PDF Running with Scissors: A Memoir, by Augusten Burroughs Doc
** Download PDF Running with Scissors: A Memoir, by Augusten Burroughs Doc

Tidak ada komentar:

Posting Komentar