BOTTLENECK is Paul Fuhr's story about his long term relationship with alcohol. He is a humorous, extremely talented, educated, smart writer who lays himself bare and stripped of ego in this wrenching account of his journey to sobriety. It is almost uncomfortable to read, making me squirm at his complete disregard for his loving wife, small children, employers and many many friends. This isn't an easy book to read. Most of us avoid hard self examination at this kind of introspective level. Everybody wants to feel good about themselves. Paul spares himself and his readers absolutely nothing, describing in great detail, his 20+ years of shockingly horrible behavior.
Paul used alcohol to keep the truth, anxiety, and everything of value in his life, at bay. Alcohol became the problem, if it ever was the solution. He is an absolute raging alcoholic, albeit a functioning one --though barely, by the time he seeks treatment. He is also a gifted wordsmith and a consummate liar, instantly liked by almost everyone he meets. He is also the king of not showing up, slacking at his jobs and ultimately disappointing everyone that ever cared about him. His sense of entitlement, while drinking is alarming, justifying the awful things he does and his lack of guilt or remorse. This is a man who made his next drink his only priority
You will probably like him, but if you never met this good-time boy, you dodged a bullet. The disregard for his amazing wife is apalling. His lies are harmful and inexcusible. I both liked him for his exuberance, and hated him for his readily admitted selfishness. But my loathing is nothing compared to the hate he feels for himself and the crushing panic that envelopes him in any sober (rare) moment. My ability to like him, while still feeling like he may be an awful person, mirrors his own uncertainty. He is undecided if he is a good person who does bad things, or a bad person who does good things. The answer to that question may very well be different for each reader.
I don't know if this story can help anybody else, but for anyone young in their alcoholic life, it should scare the living daylights out of them. The years this talented, popular man wasted and the people he hurt, in his wide destructive swath, should alarm anyone.
If you like memoir 's and personal interest stories, I think you will enjoy this raw account of out-of-control self destruction. How you feel about it may very well depend on the ways alcohol has impacted your personal life, or those close to you.
My single complaint about BOTTLENECK would be a couple places where I grew weary of the drunken antics; they seemed a bit long and repetitive, though I have no doubt they are indicative of the way things really were.