Book Review -Drunks by Christopher Finan

Alcoholism and the treatment of is a fascinating topic to view through the historical lens and Christopher Finan goes back in time with Drunks to look at it.

What really stands out is a weird omission from America’s weird relationship with alcohol. Prohibition is effectively swept past with nary a chapter. Yes, talk of the prohibition movement is woven through but Drunks is more concerned with those who are trying to understand and eradicate drunkeneness. Either through kindness or a complete lack thereof.

Once, you key into the format chosen, this works as a look into those who are trying to understand and possibly fix when people are lost in alcohol. But it seems from this reading that nothing has really been learned about the core of why one person may quickly and completely succumb and another drink more but be in control.

Genetics? Nature vs. Nurture. Finan’s book doesn’t really answer this. It all comes back to AA, which is fine. I, personally, don’t have any quibbles with how they approach this problem. In fact, I believe it is probably the best avenue overall. But that makes this book a long windup to a quick answer. You need a village to raise a child and to monitor those who drink.

Maybe, I am in the mood to learn more about the modern recovery and abuse issue industry and how it works and fails and charges way too much.

Review – The Wet and the Dry

6a00d8341c562c53ef0192ac2b4a47970d-250wi

A book about the moral, philosophical and health reasons for a person, government or religion to eschew alcohol should be a slam dunk fascinating topic for someone like me.  I love to read and I blog about craft beer which has been critically impacted by a major U.S. prohibition.  So, when I was offered a copy of The Wet and the Dry to review, I leapt at the chance.

The writing credentials of the author Lawrence Osborne seemed to indicate a “sober” look at this issue.  His work has appeared in the New York Times Magazine, Wall Street Journal Magazine, the New Yorker.  All usually publish articles of interest.  The book jacket summary was promising and alcoholic prohibitions could yield so many insights.  Hell, a memoir of a descent into alcoholism would be interesting.  Or the role of alcohol in the Muslim world if alcoholism has been covered enough in your mind.

Unfortunately, this writing is totally hampered by the narrator’s near constant alcoholic haze.  Osborne is a pompous ass throughout the book.  He jumps into pools drunk.  He casually dismisses people, especially the ones that dare ask for the article he was supposed to write.  He spends scads of money on hotel opulence all while opining in a quasi-literary voice.  He is that drunk guy at the end of the bar who loves the sound of his own voice that everyone edges away from in pity and loathing.

Instead of illuminating  the role of alcohol in cultures (most notably the Middle East), he flaunts his knowledge.  There is no passing of information from author to reader.  I stopped reading the book 40 pages in and read two other books.  I read another 40 pages and came to the decision that this had to be a novel and I was following the exploits of an anti-hero.

The main reason why this “character” is so foul in my eyes is that there is no appreciation of the arak or champagne or the “11 Mai Tais” he drinks.  It is the American consumption for consumptions sake credo.  He may as well mainline Everclear if the only point is to achieve his nirvana of drunkenness.

Why even travel to lands that most readers will never visit if all you can do is sit in a hotel bar swirling your G&T.  All the while lamenting the fact that the bar carries spirits you can find anywhere.  I learned more about Dubai when Tom Cruise pulled the Spiderman act in Mission Impossible.

I have read many glowing reviews of this book which praise the witty wordplay.  To me it was a series of unremarkable tossed off one liners that probably sound better if you are three sheets to the wind.  After reading The Wet and the Dry all I could think about was finding a book(s) that would actually convey a thought and not some incoherent babblings accented by a trip to the dictionary of pretty words.