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The Best Awful (2003)

par Carrie Fisher

Séries: Suzanne Vale (2)

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444856,048 (3.22)3
Suzanne Vale, the Hollywood actress, whose drug addiction and rehab rigors were so brilliantly dissected by Carrie Fisher in Postcards From the Edge, is back. And this time she has a new problem: She's had a child with someone who forgot to tell her he was gay. He forgot to tell her and she forgot to notice. Suzanne's not sure she has what it takes to be the best mother to her daughter, Honey. She can't seem to shake the blues from losing Honey's father to Nick - the man who got the man who got away. Or maybe those aren't the blues, just more symptoms of her sprawling multi-symptomatic bipolar illness: an illness Suzanne can't bring herself to take all that seriously, no matter what her doctors say. How serious can an illness be whose symptoms are spending sprees, substance abuse, and sexual promiscuity? And worst of all, under the watchful round eyes of the pills the doctors' plied her with, her friends are starting to find her a little...boring. The obvious solution is to take a little walk on the wild side. But what starts out as a brief gambol through the scary/fun world of twenty-first-century dating becomes a vigorous jog-trot through the latest drug wonderland - and finally a wild gallop toward a psychotic breakdown and a stay in "the bin." Based on a truant's story, The Best Awful is Carrie Fisher's most powerful and revealing novel: hilarious, moving, and fully informed by the wisdom of a true survivor.… (plus d'informations)
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» Voir aussi les 3 mentions

Affichage de 1-5 de 8 (suivant | tout afficher)
Carrie Fisher’s raw honestly and battles with mental illness is heartbreaking. ( )
  caanderson | May 11, 2020 |
I listened to the audiobook, read by the author. Like "Postcards From the Edge," this one was said to be very much mined from her real life. It was by no means great, but in once again detailing the many trials of her alter ego, Suzanne Vale, some huge belly laughs were to be found - especially in scenes when she would gently mock and/or imitate her movie-star mother.

The main trajectory of these stories - there isn't really a plot - focuses on Suzanne's struggle to cope with the fact that her husband, and the father of her child, has left her for a man. Suzanne has bipolar disorder, and this hugely life-altering event doesn't help her situation. She wants to be a good mother to her daughter, Honey, and keep her life on an even keel, but it is a struggle. Eventually, after some bad personal and medication choices, she suffers a breakdown and ends up doing a short stint in a mental hospital. Upon her release, she resolves to stay on track, for herself and for her loved ones.

Since Carrie Fisher so recently passed away, it was especially poignant listening to these revelatory stories drawn from her life. Her humorous views on life in the shadow of her famous mother were well-documented, and a recurring theme in "Postcards From the Edge" was how Debbie Reynolds seemed incapable of not stealing the spotlight, even from her own daughter. So I like to think Carrie would have found it wryly humorous that the very next day after she herself died of a heart attack, her mother died of a stroke - overshadowing her for the final time. ( )
  AngeH | Jan 2, 2020 |
So the author of this book is Carrie Fisher. It is an incredibly polished fictional tale of a woman whose husband is gay and leaves her, and her young daughter, for another man. The trials and tribulations described are what the main character Suzanne Vale calls, "Chicken Soup for the Fag Widow." This book has one of the most accurate descriptions of bi-polar experiences I've read thus far and is worth reading just for the insight into that mental illness itself. The book is obviously semiautobiographical as Fisher is the daughter of the also famous Debbie Reynolds. Except for a trite part of the story where Suzanne goes into a mental health institute, which is stereotypical (Girl, Interrupted allusions) and flippant about health care professionals, the book was much more than I was expecting. Carrie Fisher has written several books (this is the second for these characters, Postcards From the Edge being the first) and she shows mastery over the artform. Fisher is probably more famous than Meryl Streep who has the most Academy Awards of any female. Except for The Deer Hunter, Sophie's Choice, and Doubt, you haven't missed anything. Streep actually was in the film version of Postcards From the Edge so I'm sure the respect between the two actresses exists at a high level. Nevertheless, Fisher was in the greatest trilogy in film history, Star Wars. Fisher's character of Princess Leia is far more important cinematic history than anything Streep has ever done. Fisher, having mastered two art distinct forms, is obviously the more talented of the two and I'm writing this to stake her claim.
The title of the book, The Best Awful, comes from a line where Suzanne describes her bipolar breakdown as awful but that she could make the 'awful' better by getting healthy again and returning to a normal life with professional help and family and friends' support. The Best Awful is an upbeat book and meant to help people not feel isolated in Hollywood, even if they are diagnosed with mental illness. If you have worked with mentally ill patients (me) or know someone who suffers from the various manifestations of it this book will amaze you for its honest descriptions of the internal mental dialogue that goes on when someone is trying their best to make it through a bad or 'awful' day. ( )
  sacredheart25 | Aug 7, 2016 |
I don't know if it was because I was miffed that she was just writing a memoir in the third person using different names, or that the characterization of Suzanne Vale reminded me too much of someone else in my life, but either way it made it extremely difficult to enjoy this book. ( )
  sublunarie | Apr 10, 2013 |
closer to memoir, if her one woman show has anything to say about it!Great to hear it read by the author. she's very bright and funny. A good writer.
  mochap | Nov 25, 2008 |
Affichage de 1-5 de 8 (suivant | tout afficher)
The Best Awful [...] suffers from a literary version of the bipolar disorder that so cripples its heroine (and - surprise - its author, who requires two dozen pills a day to control the condition). When it is good, it is... well... fine; when it is bad, which is too often, it is absolutely bloody awful, so toxically terrible you feel like rushing out of doors and burying it at the bottom of the garden.
ajouté par Nevov | modifierThe Observer, Rachel Cooke (Feb 8, 2004)
 

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For my, daughter Billie, and her father, Bryan
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Suzanne Vale had a problem, and it was the one she least liked thinking about: She had a child with someone who forgot to tell her he was gay.
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Suzanne Vale, the Hollywood actress, whose drug addiction and rehab rigors were so brilliantly dissected by Carrie Fisher in Postcards From the Edge, is back. And this time she has a new problem: She's had a child with someone who forgot to tell her he was gay. He forgot to tell her and she forgot to notice. Suzanne's not sure she has what it takes to be the best mother to her daughter, Honey. She can't seem to shake the blues from losing Honey's father to Nick - the man who got the man who got away. Or maybe those aren't the blues, just more symptoms of her sprawling multi-symptomatic bipolar illness: an illness Suzanne can't bring herself to take all that seriously, no matter what her doctors say. How serious can an illness be whose symptoms are spending sprees, substance abuse, and sexual promiscuity? And worst of all, under the watchful round eyes of the pills the doctors' plied her with, her friends are starting to find her a little...boring. The obvious solution is to take a little walk on the wild side. But what starts out as a brief gambol through the scary/fun world of twenty-first-century dating becomes a vigorous jog-trot through the latest drug wonderland - and finally a wild gallop toward a psychotic breakdown and a stay in "the bin." Based on a truant's story, The Best Awful is Carrie Fisher's most powerful and revealing novel: hilarious, moving, and fully informed by the wisdom of a true survivor.

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