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Mike Doughty (1) (1970–)

Author of The Book of Drugs: A Memoir

For other authors named Mike Doughty, see the disambiguation page.

5+ Works 223 Members 8 Reviews

Works by Mike Doughty

The Book of Drugs: A Memoir (2012) 111 copies, 6 reviews
Slanky (2002) 90 copies, 2 reviews
Haughty Melodic (2005) 4 copies
Skittish/Rockity Roll (2004) 2 copies

Associated Works

The Future Dictionary of America (2004) — Contributor — 650 copies, 3 reviews
McSweeney's 06: We Now Know Who (2001) — Composer — 210 copies, 5 reviews

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1970-06-10
Gender
male
Nationality
USA
Associated Place (for map)
USA

Members

Reviews

8 reviews
Perhaps my expectations were high. I love Mike Doughty's fabulously jazz-infused poetry, the lyrical element that made Soul Coughing a poetic force, the poetry one still finds in the man's solo efforts. And I had hoped for some sense of the same in this memoir. That was not the case.

The Book of Drugs, while revelatory about an artist whom I admire and whose music I still very much enjoy, was - I'm sorry to say - somewhat dull, lackluster in its crafting and construction. And Doughty's show more smoldering resentments at his former band-mates, unnecessary litany of women with whom he had sex during that time of his life, and often inexplicable and distantly tangential rambling didn't add to its literary merit.

I get it - the man needed to tell his story - what it was like, what happened, and what it's like now. Perhaps he just didn't need to publish it.
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Decent but disappointing memoir. I am a huge (apologies to M Doughty) Soul Coughing fan. And more specifically a M Doughty fan, but although I enjoyed the book, found it disappointing. Quizzically, Doughty's writing is not as clever or entertaining as you would expect. The book is written free form and it's difficult to place when events were happening. It seems as if Doughty could have benefitted from even greater distance, even though it approaching 15 years since the band existed. show more Although I realize it's my perspective, Soul Coughing, the band, was always greater than the sum of its parts - they were truly avant guarde. Doughty is capable of forgiving himself but not the petty indiscretions of the others that helped make SC the last truly great band. All things considered, I still dig Doughty, SC and would read the book again. show less
This book recalled to my memory the most excellent book review of James Frey's a million little pieces. More specifically, it reminded me of this paragraph in particular;

"A Million Little Pieces is the dregs of a degraded genre, the rehab memoir. Rehab stories provide a way for pampered trust-fund brats like Frey to claim victim status. These swine already have money, security and position and now want to corner the market in suffering and scars, the consolation prizes of the truly lost. show more It's a fitting literary metonymy for the Bush era: the rich have decided to steal it all, even the tears of the losers."

(the complete review is excellent. For those interested http://www.exile.ru/articles/detail.php?ARTICLE_ID=6948.. )

If someone is interested in the very short version of this review, there you have it: M.Doughty would like victim status. He doesn't go about this very well.

I love Soul Coughing. Alas, by the time a friend had introduced me to this band, they had already disbanded. When I discovered that Mike Doughty was off on his own making music, I gave that a listen to. And found myself greatly disappointed. The lesson I should already have learned by that point was simple; a frontman is not a band, and just because I like a band does not mean I will like the frontman when he goes solo.

But I bought this book anyway. While what I loved about this band was how the music worked in combination (I to this day still make the claim that the best bands are bands featuring an upright bass), I always did think that Doughty did some wonderful things with words in the band. Doughty certainly had musical talent, as you can tell from those parts of his music where he gives us rhythms with nonsensical words (see 'Sleepless' from Irresistible Bliss), but he also could construct fantastic hallucinatory narratives (see 'Lazybones' from the same album). In other words, I had faith that Doughty could do something with Book of Drugs. And with such a title, I was expecting something a little more Naked Lunch-esque. I was disappointed.

The worst part of it all is that the book is not particularly well written. This is a great disappointment coming from a person who built a career on constructing very beautiful images. But he cannot make it happen here. Samuel Delany has made the claim prose is about sentences, while poems are about words (which is to say that good prose is about good sentences. I would tell you what good poetry is about if i had any idea). If that is the case, then this book is truly awful. Every sentence is basically the exact same, and almost all of them begin with "I..." It becomes very monotonous, very quickly. And that in turn makes us care very little about the story in itself. We occasionally get wonderful little gems, such as "Beats dopplered down broadway" but not nearly enough of them to make this book worth anything.
I do find it rather funny that at one point early in this memoir a teacher of poetry gives some advice to aspiring poets, one of which was to scrap a bad poem and keep just the one or two lines that work really well. The advice should have been considered to condense this book down to one really nice poem.

But the subject matter might have been beyond redemption even if the writing had been superb. The book gives us some background on Doughty's life, but before you know it he has formed a band and has become the world's largest victim. He doesn't get credit for this, he doesn't get respect for that. Blah Blah Blah. All the while, he spirals down into junkie-hood, never actually getting Last Exit For Brooklyn bad. His prose, dead and wooden as it is, denies us the vicarious high we get from good drug narratives.
And at some point, I stopped believing him.
I am sure he did the drugs he did and had the experiences he had, I would not take that away from him (as we would with James Frey). But at some point I realized that the relationships Doughty had through those year could not have been all bad. I simply refuse to believe that one could be in a band with three people, each one worse than the next. I as well refuse to believe that he could have done all the work for all the songs and still have been unappreciated by the other band members. Had he put so much work into the music, the other band members would likely have treated him as a cash cow. But perhaps the proof is in the pudding. If the songs Doughty had played with Soul Coughing were solely or mostly his, then why has his style and content drifted so heavily in his solo career. I can understand burning bridges, but would you really burn down your own, hard built bridges?
I wouldn't. And if I had to, I would make more bridges in that same style.
Maybe the point Doughty is trying to make in the book is that at that point he wanted to complete come away from his past live. Its not clear from the text, and its not very believable.
According to his website, Doughty had put together a new band, complete with an upright bass, Should he come into my town, we shall see if his new stuff holds a candle to his old. And that might give some validity to this book.
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Poetry makes great bathroom reading. In case you didn't know Doughty is/was the lead singer for the band Soul Coughing. They had some really creative music/lyrics (think Cake) and so I figured this would be interesting. It was much more comprehensible than Serg Tankian's poetry but still didn't blow me away. There's the occasionally cool turn of phrase or piece of imagery but nothing very memorable. As I said with Serg's book (though differently), I understand how much this poetry is part of show more the author's life (in the time that he wrote it). In other words I get it, but it really doesn't do much for me because it's not mine. show less

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Works
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2
Members
223
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Rating
½ 3.4
Reviews
8
ISBNs
11

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