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Paperback Down and Out on Murder Mile Book

ISBN: 0061582867

ISBN13: 9780061582868

Down and Out on Murder Mile

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Book Overview

After exhausting their resources in the slums of Los Angeles, a junkie and his wife settle in London's murder mile, the city's most violent and criminally corrupt section. Persevering past failed treatments, persistent temptation, urban ennui, and his wife's ruinous death wish, the nameless narrator fights to reclaim his life.

In prose that could peel paint from a car, Tony O'Neill re-creates the painfully comic, often tragic days of a recovering...

Customer Reviews

3 ratings

Dark, Hilarious, and Sadly True

Extremely graphic and with perfect pace throughout, /Down and Out on Murder Mile/ gives an utterly honest and true look into the lives of drug addicts who are trying to make it as something other than a drug addict. The protagonist and his wife find themselves on Murder Mile in London, as a last vestige after their previous attempt to "settle down" somewhere failed. Murder Mile ends up being the worst possible place for the two, especially since the man is attempting, at least somewhat, to get a hold of himself and grow out of his addictions. Told with unwavering honesty, it is the perfect description of the lifestyle, and not surprising from a man who has lived it. /Down and Out on Murder Mile/ is a force to be reckoned with.

Murderously intriguing read

With DOWN AND OUT ON MURDER MILE, Tony O'Neill doesn't romanticize the junkie life; he proves instead that it's everyone else who romanticizes the sober life. And yet for all of its outsider coolness, it is not as preachy as the drug narratives of the 1990's about its anti-materialism. The speaker's lyricism trumps any attempts to condemn him as whiny. Instead he seems desperately aware and even sensitive within a world where narcissism and ignorance are so rampant it is perfectly normal for them to go unironically unnoticed. LA serves as ground zero for the explosively grotesque addiction. The thunderous militarism of America's attitude toward drugs blackens every street and secrets every high. When the narrator is whisked with his junkie wife to London, there is a brief sigh of relief. But London proves to have its own secret daggers. Life in London becomes like trading in your old lover for one who promises to beat your body instead of your face so it won't show as much. The voice here is simultaneously youthful and eternal. It has captured what the beats captured in the 1950's not by going off on be-bop and jazz or even new jazz. It instead rejuvenates their spirit by portraying an international exchange of subculture and colorful adolescence that would make William Gibson jealous. It evokes the spirit of Burroughs with due respect and even passion. But really it is better than Burroughs because it's easier to read and has girls. And so, while O'Neill ultimately agrees with Aubrey DeGrey that "life is a terminal illness", one must read this book to understand the light and intricate web of ideas that thwart simple solutions to problems like addiction. Because in the end, survival itself is no solution or purpose. But beauty, shared, smashed, bleeding or otherwise, has every right to exist.

Walking the Wild Side

I reviewed this book at 3AM Magazine http://www.3ammagazine.com/3am/walking-the-wild-side/ Mike Covey, editor, Lit Up Magazine http://stokeycat.blogspot.com http://litupmagazine.wordpress.com http://bookchapters.wordpress.com
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