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In the Open: Diary of a Homeless Alcoholic [Hardcover]

Timothy E. Donohue (Author)
3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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Book Description

October 1, 1996 0226157679 978-0226157672 1
Compelling, raw, and painfully self-aware, In the Open describes an existence most people can barely imagine. A first-hand account of one man's struggle with homelessness and alcoholism, this diary records a world full of physical degradation and despair that is not without unpredictable moments of striking beauty.

Donohue's experiences are brutal, but his perceptions are poetic. This account of an intelligent and sensitive man in the grip of alcoholism and homelessness challenges our perceptions of those on the margins of American contemporary life.

"Donohue recorded this often-moving account during a four-year period of homelessness caused by his alcoholism. . . . There are many brilliant observations here on a range of topics, including human nature, technology, and capitalism. . . . Donohue's life on the fringe also provides an inside look at the homeless system of overnight shelters, labor offices, and food stamp providers. But, somehow, in spite of all the negatives, a hopeful book emerges."—Booklist

"A startlingly original book. In this confessional age, Donohue's diary becomes a different sort of tell-all, a palimpsest that forces us to extract the author from his own writing. . . . Donohue comes to resemble Swift's Gulliver"—Nicholas Nesson, Boston Phoenix

"Donohue punctuates his account of 'domiciling within the black walls of a mosquito-infested night' with rambling metaphysical asides in the style of an eighteenth-century philosophe."—Molly McQuade, Lingua Franca

"Despite hunger, homelessness, dead-end jobs and abusive drinking, what is most striking about Donohue is his amazing optimism and endurance."—Patrick Markee, Nation

"Donohue is a gifted writer. . . . But what gives [his diary] the breath of life is that it is written by an artist."—Alec Wilkinson, Los Angeles Times Book Review

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

Imagine Charles Bukowski with a degree in business administration, rambling across the United States and holding forth on business and the drinking life. Timothy Donohue is literate and intelligent, he's fond of quoting Emerson, and his head is bursting with novel ideas about how to make the economy work better. He's also blind drunk much of the time. When lucid he recounts his misadventures in his journal.

This book is startling, a brutal first-person narrative of life on the drunken underside of America. It's also often infuriating. Donohue is obviously intelligent and seems to have chosen his life in the gutter. While one might honestly wonder why we should listen to a drunk who sleeps in ditches expound on esoteric economic theories, the quality of the writing and the power of the narrative carry the day. In the Open is a peculiar book that disturbs as it enlightens.

From Publishers Weekly

From February 1990 through December 1994, down and out and often homeless, Donohue intermittently kept a diary whose purpose, he reminds us, was to help him stop drinking. Unfortunately, "Writing a book about alcohol and its effects is a two-edged sword. The intake of that substance provides the author with subject matter in the form of strange experiences and unusual perspectives at the same time that it undermines his ability to write about them." In the Open reveals a misanthropic white American college graduate in his late 30s who exercises his mind with sophomoric theories about economics, psychology and sociology?and who occasionally writes descriptive prose as well as anybody. One of several extraordinary accounts is of a sandstorm: while drunkenly staggering through a pitch-dark Nevada desert, he is grasped by a hand on his shoulder; he turns and sees no one but knows it was the "Devil." The storm suddenly clears; he collects his goods and resumes drinking. In spite of the predictable alcohol-induced pratfalls, Donohue is likable without ever trying to be. After his father's death brings him $15,000, he muses: "I am hoping I will be able to get and keep a job. I am hoping I will stop or moderate my drinking. Mostly, I am hoping I will not squander the $15,000... I just don't know if my behavior can comply with my great store of sagacity and prudence." Our sympathy and interest rest on how his almost relentless self-destructiveness never completely finishes him off. Donohue always staggers to his feet to discover fresh or renewed resolutions once more.
Copyright 1996 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 210 pages
  • Publisher: University Of Chicago Press; 1 edition (October 1, 1996)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0226157679
  • ISBN-13: 978-0226157672
  • Product Dimensions: 8.6 x 5.6 x 0.9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.1 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #3,198,544 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

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Average Customer Review
3.7 out of 5 stars (3 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Diary of a Wasted Talent, January 15, 2000
By A Customer
This review is from: In the Open: Diary of a Homeless Alcoholic (Hardcover)
One reviewer compared this book to George Orwell's "Down and Out in Paris and London," a gritty look at the lives of transients in France and England in the 1930s. In truth, this book and its author bear more resemblance to Ted Kaczynski and his anti-technology "Manifesto."

The difference is that Orwell never became part of world he described. Exploring the world of the lower classes, he was constantly betrayed by his "lower-upper-middle-class" mannerisms and tastes. Timothy Donohue is all too much a part of the world he describes--namely, the nightmarish world of the late-stage alcoholic.

On the surface, "In the Open" is about a man who freely admits he's trapped in alcohol's clutches but is somehow able to string together a carefully reasoned argument in favor of food stamp reform, typing his manuscript at public libraries whenever he's sober and has the opportunity.

His thesis proceeds with fits and starts, however, as Donohue--who sees himself as an unappreciated visionary--struggles with simple tasks made monumentally difficult by his disease. Obtaining money, finding and keeping a menial job, avoiding the police and bullies, keeping his few possessions intact--all these things demand increasing expenses of time and energy as the author tries unsuccessfully to moderate his drinking.

It's not unusual for an alcoholic to reason that the problem isn't with himself but with the rest of the world. What's unusual is for an alcoholic to go to the lengths to which Donohue has gone to persuade the world that he's right and it's wrong. There may be some sense to Donohue's economic proposals, but then there may be some sense to the musings of a teenager who talks metaphysics while smoking pot. His ideas are nothing if not grandiose--and grandiosity is one of the hallmarks of alcoholism. There's something about Donohue's economic plan that rings false; perhaps it's our awareness that what Donohue's really trying to reconstruct is not the American welfare system but his own shattered Self. If he can prove (to himself at least) that the system's broken, then who can blame him for checking out?

Donohue is at his best when he's describing the landscape and his immediate surroundings, which are by turns enchanting and menacing. There's no denying he has a gift for descriptive prose. Seeing this gift in the service of such a wayward project, however, is somewhat depressing. If he can hit patches of brilliance while drunk and living on the street, where's the limit to what he could do if he got his life turned around? (On the other hand, if Donohue were leading a "normal" life, he might not feel compelled to write at all.)

Oddly, this book is presented with no commentary apart from what's on the dust jacket. There's no Introduction or Forword to put the author and his plight in perspective. There's no Afterword; the narrative ends abruptly, and the reader is left with many questions. Did Donohue ever get his drinking "under control"? Did he ever realize that he wasn't that much different from other alcoholics after all? Did he ever find a spiritual solution to his torment? Is he even still alive?

Because the publisher, the University of Chicago Press, offers such scant explanation, we're also left wondering why the book was published in the first place. Did the editors find merit in Donohue's economic proposals, or is the book intended as an example of the lengths to which a damaged psyche will go to justify itself? The reader is left to draw his or her own conclusions.

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A fascinating and puzzling look at a very strange life!, May 7, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: In the Open: Diary of a Homeless Alcoholic (Hardcover)
In this autobiography, Donohue chronicles his peregrinations across the USA while drinking himself silly. He gets a few lucky breaks, some money here and there, a little success, but he drinks it all away. In the end, the book snaps shut abruptly with no conclusion, no climax, no denouement, nothing. Just snaps shut in a very odd way. But then it is just a peek into one man's life, the life of an alcoholic. I definitely had more sympathy for homeless people, even alcoholic homeless people, after reading this book. The potential reader should be warned that it contains a lot of economic theory that Donohue, who actually graduated from college with a business degree, develops. So that stuff is a bit dry and you can safely skip over most of it.
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4.0 out of 5 stars It's a diary, February 20, 2006
This is not a coherent, well-structured narrative. It's a first-person account of an intelligent person disabled by alcoholism. He's an individual. He doesn't represent everyone in his category. Its value is in the intimate look inside the mind of an addict and how he makes decisions. I was especially interested in the lies he tells himself to get different effects. For example, he says, to stop drinking for two days he must *decide* to stop for a month. His description of the pain that drives him to drink is vivid and heartbreaking.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
THURSDAY FEBRUARY 15, 1990 I am hoping that, by writing down feelings and conclusions that consideration of alcohol evokes in me day by day or week by week as the case may be, I will be able to ameliorate what for me has come to be a very serious problem. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
daily labor office, lettuce factory, daily labor agency, wage shipment, food stamp proposal, frivolous products, desert lot, commune members
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Las Vegas, Chef Donohue, United States, Santa Barbara, Big Island, Croix River, Green Valley, Apache Junction, Twin Cities
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