Slippery steps Rolling and tumbling toward sobriety

Don McLeese

Book - 2022

"How can an alcoholic possibly have no sense that he is an alcoholic? In Slippery Steps, a brave, precise, unflinching, and valuable memoir, Don McLeese shows how alcoholism can insinuate itself into a life that, all things considered, seems pretty good. Spoiler alert: McLeese finds AA, and his book gives the best account I’ve read of how that organization can support someone on the road to recovery" --Ben Yagoda, author, Memoir: A History.

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Subjects
Genres
Autobiographies
Biographies
Published
North Liberty, Iowa : Ice Cube Press [2022]
Language
English
Main Author
Don McLeese (author)
Physical Description
337 pages ; 23 cm
ISBN
9781948509350
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Rock journalist McLeese (Kick Out the Jams) chronicles his road to sobriety in this uninhibited saga. While McLeese initially got sober in an attempt to save his marriage, he remained in denial that he was an alcoholic: "I was a full-grown man, a good father and husband, a responsible breadwinner who had never lost so much as a day of work, let alone a job, to alcohol," McLeese writes. "I deserved my reward." As he details his time in Alcoholics Anonymous, he unpacks his relationship to alcohol and how it was shaped by his family (" drank daily, regularly, habitually, and he drank a lot"), as well as his early obsession with rock music, which was accompanied by the use of drugs and alcohol to mask his social anxiety and depression: "I had a drinking solution to a much bigger problem, which was my abject misery and inability to live with that discomfort." Taking readers along on his path to swearing off alcohol--a battle that only became harder with his increasingly demanding positions as a rock critic and college professor--McLeese charts in hurtling vignettes a new identity for himself free from the pressure of his addiction. The author's fans will bask in the storytelling. (Sept.)

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

A veteran music journalist chronicles his descent into and rise out of alcohol dependency. While McLeese, a longtime writer and editor at the Chicago Sun-Times, Austin American-Statesman, and No Depression, climbed the media ranks as a music writer, alcohol began playing a more significant role in his life. He opens with an episode in which his wife, Maria, called 911 after discovering the author passed out drunk on the front lawn during a rainstorm. "I had been drinking for decades, nightly, and, yes, progressively more and more." Eventually, his "self-medicating coping mechanism" severely damaged his family life and eroded a career he'd been building for decades. McLeese writes insightfully about how binge-drinking "became a way to recapture the impetuosity of lost youth" and probes his family history, showing how his parents' dual alcoholism influenced his own propensity for addiction. Because he lacked the resolve to quit, the falls and the blackouts became commonplace. However, once he fully realized that he needed to stop or the strongholds in his life--especially his marriage and his relationships with his children--would continue to crumble, McLeese embarked on the true road to sobriety with earnest intentions. While his initial introductory experiences with the Alcoholics Anonymous fellowship are laced with wry humor, it's clear that the author remained unconvinced that cessation was truly necessary and instead simply vowed to "play along" with the step program. "Did I want to be sober?" he repeatedly asked himself, "I wasn't sure." Even the beginning stages of sobriety proved to be a great challenge. Without alcohol, the fun of vacation evaporated, as did the enjoyment of daily life in general. McLeese is forthright and candid throughout, even when his honesty paints him as a functioning alcoholic deluded by fierce denial and false promises. The author's eventual epiphany and road to sobriety continue, as evidenced by the inclusion of a closing "Step" education, which sober readers will recognize and appreciate. A raw, painfully honest memoir rendered in assured prose. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.