Search
Home arrow Online Shop
Snagging Shop
Make sure you find all
the defects in your
new home. Purchase
our snagging guide.
Snagging Guide
Reviews
Get a professional
snagger to create a
snag list for your new
property in the UK or Ireland.
Snagging Inspections
Main Menu
Home
New Homes News
Snagging Stories
New Homes Research
Snagging Forum
Snagging Cloud
Snagging Top Ten
Web Links
Snagging Photos
Property Books
Online Shop
Polls
Press
 
Login for Download
Contact us
 
Site Map
New Build Inspections
The leading truly independent snagging company.

UK: Snagging
Ireland: Snag List
Money Supermarket.com
Cheap Home Insurance and Compare Mortgages at Moneysupermarket.com
HIPS Directory
Find HIPS Providers in your local area using the HIP Central Home Information Pack Directory
Property Links

Investment Property
Let Choices help you find investment property.

Bermondsey Property
Search for Bermondsey Property in London. Hot Property has thousand of properties for sale in Bermondsey and property throughout the UK

Offplan Property
Are you looking for offplan property? Attend an inexpensive property seminar and get expert advice on property investment.

Walthamstow Flats
Find a Walthamstow Flat with Hot Property. We have over 95 thousand houses and flats on our database, including flats in Walthamstow

Parking in London
Think it's impossible? Find parking in London. More information at Gumtree.


 
Advertisement

Junky (Essential Penguin)

Snagging.org In association with Amazon.co.uk

Online Shop | Property Guides |  Kitchen & Home |  Garden Tools |  Power Tools |  Consumer Electronics

Get the Snagging Checklist Here!


  



Junky (Essential Penguin)
by: William S Burroughs

 : Junky (Essential Penguin)

List Price: £8.99
Amazon.co.uk's Price: £6.99
You Save: £2.00 (22%)
Prices subject to change.



Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours



This item ships for FREE with Super Saver Shipping.
Binding: Paperback
Dewey Decimal Number: 813
EAN: 9780140282696
Edition: New Ed
ISBN: 0140282696
Label: Penguin
Manufacturer: Penguin
Number Of Pages: 176
Publication Date: February 25, 1999
Publisher: Penguin
Studio: Penguin




Related Items:



Customer Reviews
Average Rating:  out of 5 stars

Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - Powerful&Brutally Honest ;Beautifully Wrote
Whether you have any interest in addiction, or you just wanna good read, put this in your "Works". Unlike so much of Burroughs,this is an easily read,straight-forward & beautifully written narrative. A disturbing account of heroin addiction in 1940's post-war America. Burrough's creates vivid characters without a single wasted word in his dry,dark tones. You feel as if you know these characters. Any preconceptions will be swiftly swepped aside as you delve deeper into this book. Its easy to forget this book was published in 1953, albeit edited&censored (unsurprisingly), as it is still applicable today. Fortunately, thanks to Burroughs(and Allen Ginsberg&Co) and others like him, the censor laws are far more realistic. A genuine 20th century classic which has stood the test of time, which will still be on bookshop shelves, and yours, in 2053.

An astonding first novel for Burrough's, the purveyor of strange...



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - ACCESSIBLE AND COMPELLING
Burroughs' writing here is a unique and successful blend of autobiography and detached journalism, unprecedented for that time. The prologue gives Junky an air of authenticity from the outset as the author briefly describes his childhood before plunging into this narrative of a journey - teeming with colourful low-life characters - from the Midwest to New York to Texas to New Orleans, a farm in the Rio Grande Valley, & finally Mexico in his relentless pursuit of the heroin trip. There is a certain aloofness in the style, giving the reader the impression that you're only witness to a restricted part of the protagonist's experiences. For example, the text makes vague references to his wife who obviously journeyed and indulged with him, but no more is told of her, poor Joan. Although Queer, which is a more rounded novel, filled in many pieces of the jigsaw, it was only upon reading Ellis Ambrose's The Subterranean Kerouac, that this novel finally made sense and I began to see a fuller picture of Burroughs, his wife and their contemporaries. Anyway, this is a piece of brilliant writing on many levels. The book concludes with a glossary of "junk lingo" or "jive talk" - so that's what the BeeGees were singing about!



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - An accurate and honest portrayal of heroin addiction
Having personally experienced heroin addiction, I was intrigued and keen to read Junky and I wasn't disappointed. Although Junky was published in the 1950s, it's excellent depiction of drug addiction and the associated lifestyle hasn't aged in the slightest (although disposable needles and syringes - 'works' - have replaced eyedroppers).

What I particularly liked about Junky, is that Burroughs isn't remotely self-pitying, even when he describes 'taking the cure' in a hospital and going through bouts of 'junk sickness'. Burroughs also manages to keep the reader completely focused on the book, with eager anticipation about what's going to happen next. Although Junky isn't a particularly long book (it only took a few days to read) it's like a slow-release euphoric experience from beginning to end!



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - Unique & Compelling
Burroughs’ writing here is a unique and successful blend of autobiography and detached journalism, unprecedented for that time. The prologue gives Junky an air of authenticity from the outset as the author briefly describes his childhood before plunging into this narrative of a journey – teeming with colorful low-life characters - from the Midwest to New York to Texas to New Orleans, a farm in the Rio Grande Valley, & finally Mexico in his relentless pursuit of the heroin trip.
There is a certain aloofness in the style, giving the reader the impression that you’re only witness to a restricted part of the protagonist’s experiences. For example, the text makes vague references to his wife who obviously journeyed and indulged with him, but no more is told of her, poor Joan. Although “Queer’, which is a more rounded novel, filled in many pieces of the jigsaw, it was only upon reading Ellis Ambrose’s “The Subterranean Kerouac,” that this novel finally made sense and I began to see a fuller picture of Burroughs, his wife and their contemporaries. Anyway, this is a piece of brilliant writing on many levels. The book concludes with a glossary of “junk lingo” or “jive talk” – so that’s what the BeeGees were singing about?



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - A classic of the early Beats
Junky is William Burroughs's first novel, and one of his most important....Don't let the first person narrative fool you, this is not an autobiography in any usual sense. Burroughs himself described it as a 'travel book.'
Unlike the cut-up novels this novel easily engages the reader. There is a narrative, even if there is no narrative development towards a repentant self realsation that would be expected in a confessional novel.
If you have read On the Road then you'll appreciate Junky.
If you have read Naked Lunch then this might come as something of a surprise. But don't berate the book for that. It might not deconstruct a logical narrative development. Or for that matter it doesn't deconstruct the liberal humanist individual. But it does reveal Burroughs the genius....
If you are familiar with Burroughs allready then Junky is well worth buying.
And if you aren't... buy this book. You'll never look at eye droppers the same way after reading this.




Try searching the Internet for "Junky (Essential Penguin)" or Ebay for "Junky (Essential Penguin)".

 

You might also be interested in the following great products:

Latest Tags


Popular Tags


  
Snagging List

Generated in 3.85565 Seconds