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Drunken Angel: A Memoir Hardcover – November 22, 2011
| Alan Kaufman (Author) Find all the books, read about the author, and more. See search results for this author |
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- Print length360 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherViva Editions
- Publication dateNovember 22, 2011
- Dimensions5.7 x 1.7 x 8.6 inches
- ISBN-101936740028
- ISBN-13978-1936740024
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Editorial Reviews
Review
--Lunch.com
"Anyone looking for an extraordinarily well-written tale of personal redemption, of overcoming addiction and finding a joyous and rewarding life on the other side, get a copy of "Drunken Angel" and read it, cover to cover. You'll be glad you did."
--Addiction Treatment
"This type of memoir can often feel predictable, but what makes Kaufman's stand out is the passion with which he throws himself into recovery... In a less talented writer's hands, a work like this might have come off like testimonial, but Kaufman is an amazing writer who really nails the recovery milieu. His work reminds me of Harry Crews, who famously presented on the page the poverty stricken deep South of his own childhood. What Crews did for depression-era Georgia sharecroppers, Kaufman does for people recovering in 12-step programs. Drunken Angel tells in pitch-perfect language and tone what recovery from alcoholism by going to 12-step meetings is like ... Kaufman has a great capacity to surprise and delight ...a testament to the human spirit and will to survive."
--Internet Review of Books
"Kaufman -- who also wrote the books "Matches" and "Jewboy" -- describes wild and dangerous binge drinking as powerfully as masters of the genre, like Charles Bukowski and Frederick Exley."
--The Jewish Daily Foreword Reviews
"In more than two hundred pages of blistering hangovers, park bench nights, and fistfights, Kaufman becomes a celebrated writer and avant garde arts advocate... A clearly articulated roadmap to freedom for the addict, "Drunken Angel" is an easy and exciting memoir. This outlaw hero is someone to cheer for..." --"Foreword Re
"Anyone looking for an extraordinarily well-written tale of personal redemption, of overcoming addiction and finding a joyous and rewarding life on the other side, get a copy of "Drunken Angel" and read it, cover to cover. You'll be glad you did."
--Addiction Treatment
"This type of memoir can often feel predictable, but what makes Kaufman's stand out is the passion with which he throws himself into recovery... In a less talented writer's hands, a work like this might have come off like testimonial, but Kaufman is an amazing writer who really nails the recovery milieu. His work reminds me of Harry Crews, who famously presented on the page the poverty stricken deep South of his own childhood. What Crews did for depression-era Georgia sharecroppers, Kaufman does for people recovering in 12-step programs. Drunken Angel tells in pitch-perfect language and tone what recovery from alcoholism by going to 12-step meetings is like ... Kaufman has a great capacity to surprise and delight ...a testament to the human spirit and will to survive."
--Internet Review of Books
"Kaufman -- who also wrote the books "Matches" and "Jewboy" -- describes wild and dangerous binge drinking as powerfully as masters of the genre, like Charles Bukowski and Frederick Exley."
--The Jewish Daily Foreword Reviews
"In more than two hundred pages of blistering hangovers, park bench nights, and fistfights, Kaufman becomes a celebrated writer and avant garde arts advocate... A clearly articulated roadmap to freedom for the addict, "Drunken Angel" is an easy and exciting memoir. This outlaw hero is someone to cheer for..." --"Foreword Reviews"
"[An] addictive memoir of self-destruction, recuperation and a literary coming-of-age." --"Kirkus Reviews"
"Whether the subject is parental abuse, alcoholism, or the travails of the writing life, Kaufman's ("Jew Boy; Matches") memoir violently grabs your attention, refusing to let up until he's had his say. This is a br
"This type of memoir can often feel predictable, but what makes Kaufman's stand out is the passion with which he throws himself into recovery... In a less talented writer's hands, a work like this might have come off like testimonial, but Kaufman is an amazing writer who really nails the recovery milieu. His work reminds me of Harry Crews, who famously presented on the page the poverty stricken deep South of his own childhood. What Crews did for depression-era Georgia sharecroppers, Kaufman does for people recovering in 12-step programs. Drunken Angel tells in pitch-perfect language and tone what recovery from alcoholism by going to 12-step meetings is like ... Kaufman has a great capacity to surprise and delight ...a testament to the human spirit and will to survive."
--Internet Review of Books
"Kaufman -- who also wrote the books "Matches" and "Jewboy" -- describes wild and dangerous binge drinking as powerfully as masters of the genre, like Charles Bukowski and Frederick Exley."
--The Jewish Daily Foreword Reviews
"In more than two hundred pages of blistering hangovers, park bench nights, and fistfights, Kaufman becomes a celebrated writer and avant garde arts advocate... A clearly articulated roadmap to freedom for the addict, "Drunken Angel" is an easy and exciting memoir. This outlaw hero is someone to cheer for..." --"Foreword Reviews"
"[An] addictive memoir of self-destruction, recuperation and a literary coming-of-age." --"Kirkus Reviews"
"Whether the subject is parental abuse, alcoholism, or the travails of the writing life, Kaufman's ("Jew Boy; Matches") memoir violently grabs your attention, refusing to let up until he's had his say. This is a brutish and riveting trek through a talented and severely alcoholic psyche. Those who persist are rewarded with stylish, intense writing and the intimate details of the author's metamorphosis." --"Publishers Weekly"
"Alan Kaufman, the author of the lively but exasperating au
"In more than two hundred pages of blistering hangovers, park bench nights, and fistfights, Kaufman becomes a celebrated writer and avant garde arts advocate... A clearly articulated roadmap to freedom for the addict, "Drunken Angel" is an easy and exciting memoir. This outlaw hero is someone to cheer for..." --"Foreword Reviews"
"[An] addictive memoir of self-destruction, recuperation and a literary coming-of-age." --"Kirkus Reviews"
"Whether the subject is parental abuse, alcoholism, or the travails of the writing life, Kaufman's ("Jew Boy; Matches") memoir violently grabs your attention, refusing to let up until he's had his say. This is a brutish and riveting trek through a talented and severely alcoholic psyche. Those who persist are rewarded with stylish, intense writing and the intimate details of the author's metamorphosis." --"Publishers Weekly"
"Alan Kaufman, the author of the lively but exasperating autobiography of alcoholism, Drunken Angel, sweetens th
"[An] addictive memoir of self-destruction, recuperation and a literary coming-of-age." --"Kirkus Reviews"
"Whether the subject is parental abuse, alcoholism, or the travails of the writing life, Kaufman's ("Jew Boy; Matches") memoir violently grabs your attention, refusing to let up until he's had his say. This is a brutish and riveting trek through a talented and severely alcoholic psyche. Those who persist are rewarded with stylish, intense writing and the intimate details of the author's metamorphosis." --"Publishers Weekly"
"Alan Kaufman, the author of the lively but exasperating autobiography of alcoholism, Drunken Angel, sweetens the pot considerably. He drops so many names, and finds himself involved in so many improbably episodes of transnational mayhem and kinky sex, that the escapades could almost fill a Bond novel. But to be fair, there's nothing debonair going on here... Alan Kaufman is more Jack Kerouac than James Bond: One of the founding members of Califor
"Alan Kaufman, the author of the lively but exasperating autobiography of alcoholism, Drunken Angel, sweetens the pot considerably. He drops so many names, and finds himself involved in so many improbably episodes of transnational mayhem and kinky sex, that the escapades could almost fill a Bond novel. But to be fair, there's nothing debonair going on here... Alan Kaufman is more Jack Kerouac than James Bond: One of the founding members of California's Spoken Word scene, editor of The Outlaw Bible of American Poetry, Kaufman bounced through the beat/hippie/downtown scenes in New York, and San Francisco and Israel, writing for Jewish publications, treating his wives shabbily, and blacking out all over whatever town he happened to be in. It's not pretty, and it's not meant to be."
--Dirk Hanson, Addiction Inbox
"With an outsized heart to go with its outsized thirst, "Drunken Angel" tells the sort of truths that feel like myths and the sort of myths that feel like truth.
--Da
"With an outsized heart to go with its outsized thirst, "Drunken Angel" tells the sort of truths that feel like myths and the sort of myths that feel like truth.
--Daniel Handler, author of "Adverb, "
""Drunken Angel" reads like a recovery memoir written in another time, from another generation, though it's of the present. Alan Kaufman's story is riveting: raw in its passion and lacerating in its testimony."
--Oscar Villalon, former book editor at the San Francisco Chronicle, board member of the National Book Critics Circle
"As engrossing, moving and honest a literary memoir as one will ever read, "Drunken Angel" is that rare combination of aching beauty and haunting truth, all made vivid and alive with a poetry that is both turbulent and profoundly wise. Alan Kaufman takes his readers on a Jewish Huck Finn journey of addiction, regret, and rage. With his immense literary gifts as a storyteller, he turns the jagged, jaded tale of his life into a true work of art
"With an outsized heart to go with its outsized thirst, "Drunken Angel" tells the sort of truths that feel like myths and the sort of myths that feel like truth.
--Daniel Handler, author of "Adverb, "
""Drunken Angel" reads like a recovery memoir written in another time, from another generation, though it's of the present. Alan Kaufman's story is riveting: raw in its passion and lacerating in its testimony."
--Oscar Villalon, former book editor at the San Francisco Chronicle, board member of the National Book Critics Circle
"As engrossing, moving and honest a literary memoir as one will ever read, "Drunken Angel" is that rare combination of aching beauty and haunting truth, all made vivid and alive with a poetry that is both turbulent and profoundly wise. Alan Kaufman takes his readers on a Jewish Huck Finn journey of addiction, regret, and rage. With his immense literary gifts as a storyteller, he turns the jagged, jaded tale of his life into a true work of
From the Back Cover
Son of a French Holocaust survivor, Alan Kaufman drank to fill the huge hole in his heart, wrecking himself and everyone in his path. In Drunken Angel, the poet and critically acclaimed writer recounts with unvarnished honesty the story of the alcoholism that took him to the brink of death, the PTSD that drove him to the edge of madness, and the love that brought him back. With his estranged daughter as inspiration and two unforgettable mentors for support, Kaufman got into recovery at age 37, taking full responsibility for nearly destroying himself, his work and so many loved ones along the way. Kaufman minces no words as he looks back on a life pickled in self-pity, self-loathing and guilt, delivering a lacerating, cautionary tale of a life wasted and reclaimed.
In league with the handful of gut-wrenching, life-changing, and enduring books about the tortures of addiction, Drunken Angel probes the consciousness of an addict to expose the true horror of alcoholism. Alan Kaufman’s searing memoir is a surreal reading experience full of stylistic acrobatics that speak to the genius of a writer nearly lost.
About the Author
Product details
- Publisher : Viva Editions (November 22, 2011)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 360 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1936740028
- ISBN-13 : 978-1936740024
- Item Weight : 0.035 ounces
- Dimensions : 5.7 x 1.7 x 8.6 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #3,647,732 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #2,594 in Jewish Social Studies
- #3,319 in Alcoholism Recovery
- #5,944 in Substance Abuse Recovery
- Customer Reviews:
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About the author

Alan Kaufman
Poet, editor, writer, and painter Alan Kaufman is author of the critically-acclaimed memoir Jew Boy (2000) as well as the novel Matches (2005) and a second memoir, Drunken Angel (2011).
Born and raised in the Bronx, he earned a BA at City College of New York before moving to Israel, where he served in the Israel Defense Forces. Returning to NYC he studied fiction in the MFA program at Columbia University,then relocated to San Francisco. There he helped to build the community of performance poets at Cafe Babar, lead the 1993 San Francisco Poets Strike, organized WORDLAND: The Antifascist Spoken Word Ballroom (1993) and in 2011 launched The Free University of San Francisco. In addition to his involvement with the Spoken Word community, Kaufman has also been a central figure in the Jewish countercultural movement, co-editing It's the Jews! A Celebration of New Jewish Visions (1995, with Danny Shot) and editing the contraversial groundbreaking magazine Davka: Jewish Cultural Revolution.
Influenced by Walt Whitman and Charles Bukowski, Kaufman writes free verse and spoken word poems that often engage themes of spirituality, identity, and cultural memory. His poetry books include American Cruiser (1990), Before I Wake (1993), Who Are We? (1997) and Straight Jacket Elegies (2015). His essays appear widely in journals such as the San Francisco Chronicle, the Los Angeles Times, Huffington Post, Evergreen Review and the Partisan Review.
Kaufman is also the editor of several anthologies: The Outlaw Bible of American Poetry (1999), The Outlaw Bible of American Literature (2004, co-edited with Barney Rosset), The Outlaw Bible of American Essays (2006) and The Outlaw Bible of American Art (2016).
His own work has been included in many anthologies, including ALOUD: Voices from the Nuyorican Poets Cafe (1994, edited by Muguel Algarin, Bob Holman, and Nicole Blackman) and Nothing Makes You Free: Writings from Descendants of Holocaust Survivors (1993, edited by Melvin Jules Bukiet).
A resident of New York City, Kaufman holds American, French, and Israeli citizenship. A broad selection of his books, paintings, notebooks, photographs and marginalia are available to be seen in The Alan Kaufman papers in the special Collections library of the University of Delaware.
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I wish that I had talent that overflowed for this author the moment he might put the bottle down. I guess this just goes to show that "talent" is innate and something a person is born with, and nothing but nothing will make it die unless the person dies. It will always struggle and grow with the urge to blossom and bloom! Live it will if the body will. What a tale to tell.
Parts of this story are so hard to read and believe they could be real... it's a nightmarish roller-coaster ride that ends up throwing the actors high into heaven. A heaven I have never seen or been in. Great story and if ever there was a book about why it's worth getting and staying "clean and sober," and working The Steps, this is it. Bravo!
PS: Even though I have no idea about "past lives," if they are true or not, it seems that his daughter, angel from above, came to protect him from the nightmare his life had become. That was one of the most moving parts about this story that is oh-so-true. Love can triumph over all. Who knew?
PPS: I still "couldn't put the book down," but after reading a two star review by Michele, and comment after, they have addressed a few of the things that bothered me in the tale. Things that just seemed "too good to be true" but I accepted them because "there they were, in black and white!" So now not sure what is going on in this story. But it does have a lot of motion to it, just like riding the biggest, giant-est, grand-est roller coaster in the whole world. I wonder what people who know the author have to say about it? So much of it just didn't make sense, as to how could one person drink and clean up in time for big meetings and make all that money and go undetected for so long? Anyway, it's still a good story to promote getting clean and AA and The Steps. Good luck to anyone who has this problem, even my own Irish Catholic family!
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