I can’t remember
being affected more by a book—especially an author’s first—as much as I was by
Joe Clifford’s Junkie Love. I have a recovering addict character in mind for the next Penns
River book, and, based on what I knew about Joe from seeing him on a Bouchercon
panel and reading his blog, I thought it might be both a good read and beneficial
research. I wasn’t sure what to make of it at first, but once I got into the
flow of the writing and non-linear story, I was completely absorbed, carrying
my Kindle with me everywhere I went on a business trip until I finished.
More or less a
junkie’s memoir, Junkie Love describes
Clifford’s addictions, as well as the behaviors that both contributed to, and
were caused by, those addictions. He makes no excuses for what is often
irresponsible and sometimes reprehensible behavior. Anyone looking for
verification of the idea of a “low-life junkie” will find it in Junkie Love, if all they do is skim the
surface.
What they’ll also
find is a man who is not a drug-manufactured sociopath; there’s a lot more
here. Clifford is honest about himself, about those who tried to stick by him,
and those who helped to keep him in the addict culture, without blaming them. Everything
is told in a matter-of-fact tone, often almost sounding like he’s responding to
an interviewer’s question. He gives himself no sympathy, and asks for none. He
grants himself no extra credit for getting straight, and expects none; it was
time, and he did it. It was hard, and he had doubts all along the way, but he
stuck with it.
I’m no addiction
counselor, but they could do worse than to make Junkie Love required reading for anyone entering a program. See if
they recognize themselves, and let them know what to expect. Not to scare them
straight—I doubt any hard-core junkie would respond to such melodrama—but the
show them it can get better. But they’re going to have to want to.
2 comments:
Looks terrific!
Thanks for the tip. I'm going to check it out, see if it comes close to the best ever written on the subject, "Dopefiend," by the great Donald Goines.
Best,
Jed Power
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