Junky

The Definitive Text of Junk (50th Anniversary Edition)

208 pages

English language

Published April 1, 2003 by Penguin (Non-Classics).

ISBN:
978-0-14-200316-9
Copied ISBN!
OCLC Number:
455208813

View on OpenLibrary

4 stars (33 reviews)

A semi-autobiographical account, narrated in a matter-of-fact manner, of the author’s life as a drug addict. The story ranges from the backstreets of New York to a drug rehabilitation hospital in Kentucky, the bars of New Orleans and on to Mexico, recounting the difficulties of obtaining drugs, financial problems and homosexual encounters. Burroughs significantly stretched the boundaries of publishable material with his debut novel.

12 editions

Review of 'Junky' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

Junky is a fascinating book, both in ways Burroughs intended and in ways he didn't.

There is a fascinating reportorial air to the novel, an unsqueamish portrayal of a depraved world. Burroughs is a junkie, a pusher, and a thief, and just tells you what that's like, neither justifying nor condemning his actions.

That, I think, is what Burroughs was after, but he also reveals things that are outside of his own intentions. First off, he shows himself an incredible narcissist. This can be seen most clearly in his references to his wife; you don't know he has one until almost halfway through the book, but even though she appears to live with him for most or all of the book, she is rarely mentioned and only in passing. He never says something like, "we moved to Mexico," it's always I moved to Mexico.

Burroughs also reveals himself to be …

Review of 'Junky' on 'Storygraph'

4 stars

Burroughs wrote this book much based on his own experience with addiction decades ago, and I think it'll forever be potent.

It's a very straight-forward, no-nonsense and no-tearjerker experience as Burroughs writes of Lee's addictions, faltering friendships, his fleeting meets with people while trying to attain drugs as quickly as possible, at times doing anything for it. He goes from selling drugs to using them, to robbing drunks on trains to escaping the law, to trying to fence stuff to get money to get more drugs to avoid The Sickness, to get to Mexico to live a better life, to avoid his wife, to get together with her, to be able to get out of bed, to try and get off drugs completely, to get into less hardcore stuff to get back into heroin.

It's very well-written, and eloquently cut-up in terms of what goes in which chapters. The descriptions …

Review of 'Junky' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

Burroughs wrote this book much based on his own experience with addiction decades ago, and I think it'll forever be potent.

It's a very straight-forward, no-nonsense and no-tearjerker experience as Burroughs writes of Lee's addictions, faltering friendships, his fleeting meets with people while trying to attain drugs as quickly as possible, at times doing anything for it. He goes from selling drugs to using them, to robbing drunks on trains to escaping the law, to trying to fence stuff to get money to get more drugs to avoid The Sickness, to get to Mexico to live a better life, to avoid his wife, to get together with her, to be able to get out of bed, to try and get off drugs completely, to get into less hardcore stuff to get back into heroin.

It's very well-written, and eloquently cut-up in terms of what goes in which chapters. The descriptions …

Review of 'Junky' on 'LibraryThing'

4 stars

Burroughs wrote this book much based on his own experience with addiction decades ago, and I think it'll forever be potent.

It's a very straight-forward, no-nonsense and no-tearjerker experience as Burroughs writes of Lee's addictions, faltering friendships, his fleeting meets with people while trying to attain drugs as quickly as possible, at times doing anything for it. He goes from selling drugs to using them, to robbing drunks on trains to escaping the law, to trying to fence stuff to get money to get more drugs to avoid The Sickness, to get to Mexico to live a better life, to avoid his wife, to get together with her, to be able to get out of bed, to try and get off drugs completely, to get into less hardcore stuff to get back into heroin.

It's very well-written, and eloquently cut-up in terms of what goes in which chapters. The descriptions …

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Subjects

  • Drug addicts -- Fiction
  • Heroin abuse -- Fiction