Some stories begin with hope. This one begins after it's been exhausted.
Too Far Gone is a memoir about addiction-not as spectacle, but as inheritance. It is the story of a son growing up in the shadow of his mother's illness, learning early how love can fracture, how silence can become survival, and how chaos can feel like home.
Written with unflinching honesty, this book traces the quiet damage addiction leaves behind: the missed moments, the blurred roles, the children forced to grow up too soon. There is no clean redemption arc here-only the truth of living with someone you cannot save, and the cost of loving them anyway.
Originally published as the author's debut, Too Far Gone has since become the foundation of a larger body of work-one that continues to explore grief, healing, and the long echoes of family trauma through memoir and poetry.
This is not a story about fixing the past. It is about surviving it-and learning how to carry what remains.