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  • The Night of the Gun

  • A Reporter Investigates the Darkest Story of His Life - His Own
  • By: David Carr
  • Narrated by: Charles Leggett
  • Length: 13 hrs and 23 mins
  • 4.5 out of 5 stars (17 ratings)
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The Night of the Gun cover art

The Night of the Gun

By: David Carr
Narrated by: Charles Leggett
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Summary

Do we remember only the stories we can live with? The ones that make us look good in the rearview mirror? In The Night of the Gun, David Carr redefines memoir with the revelatory story of his years as an addict and chronicles his journey from crack-house regular to regular columnist for The New York Times.

Built on 60 videotaped interviews, legal and medical records, and three years of reporting, The Night of the Gun is a ferocious tale that uses the tools of journalism to fact-check the past. Carr's investigation of his own history reveals that his odyssey through addiction, recovery, cancer, and life as a single parent was far more harrowing - and, in the end, more miraculous - than he allowed himself to remember. Over the course of the book, he digs his way through a past that continues to evolve as he reports it.

That long-ago night when he was so out of his mind that his best friend had to pull a gun on him to make him go away? A visit to the friend 20 years later reveals that Carr was pointing the gun.

His lucrative side business as a cocaine dealer? Not all that lucrative, as it turned out, and filled with peril.

His belief that after his twins were born, he quickly sobered up to become a parent? Nice story, if he could prove it.

The notion that he was an easy choice as a custodial parent once he finally was sober? His lawyer pulls out the old file and gently explains it was a little more complicated than that.

In one sense, the story of The Night of the Gun is a common one: a white-boy misdemeanant lands in a ditch and is restored to sanity through the love of his family, a God of his understanding, and a support group that will go unnamed. But when the whole truth is told, it does not end there.

Ferocious and eloquent, courageous and bitingly funny, The Night of the Gun unravels the ways memory helps us not only create our lives, but survive them.

©2008 David Carr (P)2008 Simon and Schuster, Inc.

Critic reviews

"Whoa: a breathtakingly candid, laugh-out-loud funny, heroically rigorous, consistently riveting, and deeply moving account of a nightmarish descent and amazing redemption. Bravo, David Carr." (Kurt Andersen)
"David Carr's The Night of the Gun reinvents the memoir genre by applying a dose of journalistic integrity. Carr's style is as elegant as his saga is gritty, and the story of his life is simply extraordinary. " (Jeffrey Toobin)

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    5 out of 5 stars
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Dark and riveting

One hell of an addiction story meticulously told. Dave rightly mocks the genre before setting off on telling a life story that at times makes your skin crawl in its self-absorbed hideousness.

A quest for truth, but definitely not redemption. Brilliantly documented and told, soulfully read. Five fucking stars

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A truly revolting human

As someone who has spent decades wrestling with substance abuse it is shockingly clear that the only reason this raging narcissist was driven to maintain sobriety was that he found more food for his staggering ego in bleating on about his war stories to those blind enough to to be suckered into the belief that junkies can change.
He recants the age old tales of deceit and transgression like he's some kind of battle worn hero, its distressing that individuals so mind bendingly shallow and selfish are entertained in the circles of recovery and its crystal clear to anyone familiar with this path that he is one of the vultures that feed off the accolades that are blindly bestowed on a real human sess pool purely because they've decided to stop using.

My greatest regret on having listened to hours of him paint himself as some kind of anti hero is that I never had the chance to meet him and punch him in his smug self obsessed face.

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