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My Friend Leonard
- Narrated by: Andy Paris
- Length: 10 hrs and 24 mins
- Categories: Biographies & Memoirs, Art & Literature
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Publisher's Summary
The father figure is Leonard, the high-living, recovering coke addict, "West Coast Director of a large Italian-American finance firm" (read: mobster) who helped to keep James Frey clean in A Million Little Pieces. The son is, of course, James, damaged perhaps beyond repair by years of crack and alcohol addiction, and by more than a few cruel tricks of fate.
James embarks on his post-rehab existence in Chicago emotionally devastated, broke, and afraid to get close to other people. But then Leonard comes back into his life, and everything changes. Leonard offers his "son" lucrative, if illegal and slightly dangerous, employment. He teaches James to enjoy life, sober, for the first time. He instructs him in the art of "living boldly", pushes him to pursue his passion for writing, and provides a watchful and supportive veil of protection under which James can get his life together. Both Leonard's and James' careers flourish, but then Leonard vanishes. When the reasons behind his mysterious absence are revealed, the book opens up in unexpected emotional ways.
My Friend Leonard showcases a brilliant and energetic young writer rising to important new challenges, displaying surprising warmth, humor, and maturity, without losing his intensity. This book proves that one of the most provocative literary voices of his generation is also one of the most emphatically human.
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What listeners say about My Friend Leonard
Reviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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Overall
- Anonymous User
- 11-04-05
Great book
I thoroughly enjoyed this book and all the characters. It is well written and as compelling as any of the fiction I usually read. I saw a totally different side to those we usually look down on or fear. Leonard was actually endearing and had a very big heart. Will listen to this one again, watching for more from Mr. Frey.
13 people found this helpful
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Overall
- Vermont
- 05-23-08
A 4.5. Freaking Perfect!
Amazing. Leonard is a wonderfully created character and James-I feel like I KNOW that guy. His energy and humor are also amazing. The entire story from Snapper, to Lilly, to Brook and back to Lilly is truly interesting, unique and very, very captivating.
Every detail down to Bella and the description of the room in Vegas makes the listener feel like they are with Leonard and "his son" on their many journeys. A terrific book!
3 people found this helpful
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- Kathy
- 04-12-07
skip this one
wow, what can i say?
This was a painful one to listen to.
The narrator was awful. I listed to two books prior to this one, and their narrations were far superior. I found Andy dull, and totally flat.
I agree with the other reviewers, the repetitions are a tad too much. stop it already!
I can say if another book comes out by Frey or if Andy reads another one, I will definitely skip it.
5 people found this helpful
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Overall
- Joyce
- 04-23-06
Painful
At times this was a good story and good listen, but the majority of it was very painful to listen too. The Author repeats his lines WAY too many times for my liking. I could have read it faster than I listened to it to...........just wanted to get to the end.
4 people found this helpful
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Overall
- Christopher S Rose
- 03-28-06
Fact or fiction
Unless you were living under a rock for the first few months of 2006, you're probably aware that there's a bit of a debate about whether James Frey was telling the truth when he wrote "A Million Little Pieces" and this book, its sequel. They're both supposed to be memoirs, and he's pretty much admitted that he made some of it up.
On the truth issue, "My Friend Leonard" is such an over the top tale that it doesn't really matter if it's true. If you read A Million Little Pieces, and you want to see how it all works out, you'll enjoy My Friend Leonard.
More accurately, you'll enjoy the second two-thirds of it. The beginning is overdone, with Frey discussing his did-he-or-didn't-he jail time, followed by a cinematic race to reach his girlfriend Lily that is both hard to believe and utterly unsuspensful to anyone who read the footnote at the conclusion of the last book.
My Friend Leonard never really gets out of melodrama mode, and that's OK. It is what it is - if it were straight-up fiction, it would still be hard to swallow some of it. I went with the assumption that it was all fiction, and I found it worked better for me.
The relationship at the center of the book, between Frey and the titular Leonard, is what drives the book forward. Enjoy the host of other characters who come into play, and especially enjoy the way the reader characterizes them with his voice. There's something just so darn likable about all of them that you genuinely feel bad when they have to go carry out some nasty business necessitated by organized crime.
As to whether it's all worth it, I'll say this: no matter how many times you read The Smoking Gun report on Frey, or replayed your TiVo'ed copy of Oprah, you won't see the end coming. It's a sad, poignant tale that has a message to pass along, and whether it's fact or fiction it's still a message worth hearing.
I enjoyed the listen. Call him a fraud if you must, but Frey knows how to spin a good yarn.
1 person found this helpful
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Overall
- Betsy Greenway
- 01-16-06
Needs to diversify writing style
I ordered this book based on the good customer reviews that I read. And, while the content was ok, I was quite disappointed in the book. There are three things about the author's style that I found really tiresome: 1) for dialogue, he WAY overused the format, "Leonard speaks:...Alison speaks:...I speak..." I got SO tired of hearing that! 2) his sentences are hugely predominantly subject, verb, clause, subject, verb, clause, subject, verb, clause. That was grating to me. 3) he also WAY overused the literary device of repeating exact sentences.
This is my humble opinion, of course. I personally enjoy books where the writing style itself does not constantly bash me on the head, but rather where I say to myself after a particularly well-done bit, "Wow! How'd you do that?" (to the author).
I'v also listened to the memoir Dry by Augusten Burroughs (sp?) which I enjoyed more.
4 people found this helpful
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Overall
- William R. Creech
- 11-08-05
Addict rebuilds his life with help from a friend.
If you read the blurb, you know the basic story. It is a true story. It is true. It is written in the present tense. This makes it much more powerful. James cried. I cried. You will cry.
4 people found this helpful
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Overall
- David
- 01-13-06
Fantastic Book
I know that James Frey has recently received some grief about the veracity (or lack there of) of the events in his books A Million Little Pieces and this book. I just wanted to say that both books are excellent and even if they were embellished, it in no way detracts from the enjoyment you will get from reading both. People need to lighten up.
5 people found this helpful
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Overall
- Suze Weinberg
- 12-22-05
Remarkable
I was meserized by "A Million Little Pieces" and awed even further by "My Friend Leonard".
It was one of the most gut wrenching experiences I've ever had, listening to these TRUE stories of James Frey's life and experiencing his struggles to stay clean and sober. He writes from his gut and in a totally straighforward way.
I have such admiration for all of the characters in both books for their perserverance and struggles on a moment to moment basis.
I hope James Frey continues to write more wonderful books like these because I will be anxiously looking forward to them.
3 people found this helpful
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- Anonymous User
- 12-14-20
love this book❣
I read this book along time ago so it was great to visit it again!
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- T. Dickson
- 02-04-19
Brillaint
What a book, what a story, James Frey's story took me to another level of thought. His story may or may not be wholly true, but that is simply an artful contrivance to bring home the truth of the basement story.
The real truth lies between the lines; it lies in the bonds of friendship; it lies in the depth (or lack of depth) in the human spirit; it lies in the self knowledge and honesty which can be nurtured if you trust yourself about yourself.
Even if 10% of this is true then James Frey is a role model for today's "lost" people
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- JOhn
- 11-16-17
Not as good as the first book, but not a disappointment
Adjusting to ‘normal life’ isn’t quite as interesting as the immediate withdrawal from crack and alcohol addiction, but this sequel to ‘A million little pieces’ is still an good book. Frey has a knack for making the mundane sound interesting. His unique writing style - to use short, often one-word sentences and lots of repetition - is better suited to the delirium of the first book rather than the more boring experiences of getting a new job and a new life, but it still works. The narration is excellent.
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- Ronstar
- 03-22-17
great!
loved it
much better narration than a million little pieces. great story - heartbreaking and fantastic.
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- Android
- 01-12-17
Moving and affirming
Perfectly ties up the ends of million pieces and teaches us to see the good in loss
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- John
- 05-30-16
Excellent
Where does My Friend Leonard rank among all the audiobooks you’ve listened to so far?
It ranks near the top.
What did you like best about this story?
It would certainly be good to have Leonard as a friend rather than an enemy. But not actually certain if I'd want it in real life.
What does Andy Paris bring to the story that you wouldn’t experience if you had only read the book?
A great accent that suited the book just right.
Was this a book you wanted to listen to all in one sitting?
No - one to savour.
But it would work if you did.
Any additional comments?
Superbly written and narrated with a style to suit the text to a 't'.
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- Robert
- 11-25-13
Leonard is the best thing about Frey
Would you recommend this audiobook to a friend? If so, why?
Yes. It's an interesting story, Leonard is a charmer. The sort of person you would want to write about, if he was ever in your life. It's an emotional story, at times.
What was one of the most memorable moments of My Friend Leonard?
Don't want to spoil it by revealing too much. When James learns to fly the spacecraft is a special moment.
What do you think the narrator could have done better?
The voice for Snapper was terrible. He gets introduced as being more like a bear than a man, I expected a real burly voice. The narrator gave him a wise-guy voice, something you'd associate to Joe Pesci. I was expecting James Gandolfini
Everyone else was alright. It must be said this narrator was far better at James' voice than the person who did A Million Little Pieces
If you made a film of this book, what would be the tag line be?
Everyone needs a Leonard
Any additional comments?
Definitely worth listening to. Best to listen to A Million Little Pieces first but it's not essential.
One surprising thing though - I've come to the conclusion I really don't like James Frey. I think he's a c0ck actually.
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- Bett Demby
- 05-28-13
An excellent follow up
I listened to this on Audio via Audible rather than actually read it and enjoyed it enormously.
I had read his first book “ A Million Little Pieces” a number of years ago and concerns that it would be problematic to leave such a long gap before beginning the follow up, proved to be unfounded.
I had also heard via a number of sources that Mr. Frey had been accused of being somewhat economical with the truth when it came to some of the details of his story. As far as I’m concerned it didn’t make the slightest bit of difference, he unfolds a fascinating account and which of us are not guilty of sometimes embellishing the truth here and there in pursuit of adding drama, excitement and pathos to enhance the storytelling.
The story picks up as James is about released from prison and join the love of his life, Lilly, who he met in rehab and is residing in a halfway house. Disaster and emotional trauma strike on the day of his release threatening to send him headlong back into his old destructive and potentially fatal addictions. Fortunately he is able to make contact with his old friend, “heart of gold” mafia /businessman from his rehab days, Leonard and shady sidekick Snapper, in the nick of time.
What follows is the charting of James’ journey to clean up his life and act, learn how to leave his depression and misery behind and look toward a future without addictions. All helped along with the copious funding, homespun wisdom and excessive appetites of his not always above board and legal mentor. It’s really pretty uplifting in its way. It’s also very funny in parts as well as moving.
James Frey has a very particular style, plenty of repetition of emotional emphasis, which is unusual, but packs a punch and often left me feeling as drained as he did! But the pace is fast and races along carrying you with it on a worthwhile and enjoyable journey from darkness into the light.
Top marks also for the narration, which handled the age difference between James and Leonard convincingly and believably throughout.
Like many of my favourite reads, the close proximity of some tissues may well be advised!
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- Anonymous User
- 11-17-20
Kinda ok....
In some parts he makes it so cheesy that it’s laughable. Actually most of the book is like this. 2/10.
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- Dan Bramley
- 08-21-17
My favourite book
Heart-wrenching and emotional, leaving you with a love for the characters and feeling completely connected through the style and delivery of James Frey's story.
A good performance by Andy Paris.
Time to go wipe the tears from my eyes. 10/10