Since the dawn of documentation, the drunken hand has scrawled its tales
of night spins and dry heaves, with results ranging from the embarrassingly bad
to the shockingly brilliant. While the latter is rarely the case, every so often
the besotted writer will overcome all obstacles and leave the world one great
book of stumbling, drooling revelation. The following are five works of alcoholic
reverie and disintegration which, in the end, truly hold their water.
1. Under the Volcano
by Malcolm Lowry
An absolute masterpiece of spiraling inebriation unto death, written by the
drunkest of drunks. Utilizing dramatic flashbacks and bursting with mystical
symbolism, this novel charts the final, mescal-addled day in the life of fallen
British Consul Geoffery Firmin. Under the Volcano plumbs the psychological depths
of a willfully sought alcoholic hell. It is a testament to Lowry’s vision that
we eventually come to understand, even sympathize with, the protagonist’s glorious
failure. Neither justification nor condemnation, this haunting, beautiful book
is a landmark of alcoholic fiction (and beyond that, one of the greatest epic
novels, ever.)
2. Leaving Las Vegas
by John O’Brien
The movie is great; the book is even better. The prose is corkscrewed and wildly
colorful in its depiction of the doomed affair of liquored-up Ben and whoring
Sera–two decent souls who have simply given up on life. For sheer poetic renderings
of the alcoholic mind, few contemporary writers have matched O’Brien’s powerful,
debauched style. Too bad he’s gone. He shot himself dead in 1994.
3. Pick-Up
by Charles Willeford
The pulpier side of dipsomania. It’s a relentless narrative of skid-row despair
and self-destructive love, buoyed by an endless flow of cheap whiskey. An utterly
compelling and irredemptive read–like watching a train wreck, hungover.
4. Factotum
by Charles Bukowski
This barely functioning alcoholic cornered the market on barfly bravado, and
Factotum is perhaps the clearest, or bleariest, expression of Bukowski’s unique
genius. A dizzying travelogue of shitty jobs gained and lost on a tidal wave
of rotgut hootch, it’s funny, sad, vulgar, and infinitely readable. Love it
or hate it, Bukowski’s intoxicated oeuvre is America’s most durable contribution
to the international literature of delirium tremors.
5. Alcoholics Anonymous, a.k.a. the Big Book,
written by and for drunks
Lastly, for a compendium of boozy bad luck, you really can’t beat this encyclopedia
of crapulous behavior. It’s the definitive bible of bottoming out. Each chapter
gives testimony to the devilish allure of drink and its uncanny ability to sneak
up and bite you in the ass. The accounts are bold, scary, and without self-pity.
It ain’t exactly high lit, but it’s real.
Rick Levin prefers a Roy Rogers. Yee-Haw!
