
Tweak: Growing Up on Methamphetamines
by Nic Sheff (2008)
Like 'Permanent Midnight', this memoir offers a raw, unflinching look at addiction and its devastating effects.

by Jerry Stahl (1995)
Permanent Midnight is not just the story of how success destroyed Jerry Stahl, but how Stahl destroyed his own success. Starting life as the prototypical "middle-class kid," he endured his father's early death, his mother's descent into major depression, and life on his own from the age of sixteen. In spite of his own bad habits, he penetrated the far-flung, sometimes exotic worlds of magazines, movies, pornography, and television. His byline appeared everywhere from Esquire and Playboy to L.A. Style, Hustler, and The Village Voice, while he penned scripts for twisted cult film classics like Cafe Flesh and Dr. Caligari. Eventually, he ended up in the big-buck world of network television, banging out shows for mega-hits like Moonlighting, ALF, and thirtysomething. But even when he was making five grand a week, he was shooting six. . Beneath the successful front ran a toxic undercurrent of betrayal and madness, hard narcotics and hardcore sex. Permanent Midnight captures the crazed reality of this double and triple life. Careening daily from his luxury home to L.A.'s most hellacious neighborhoods, from the rankest methadone clinic to the backlot at Twentieth Century-Fox, he financed a heroin habit that brought on the soothing hiss of oblivion, even as it stole his health and trashed his career. Until, in a private apocalypse straight out of Day of the Locusts, Jerry Stahl kicked smack and emerged clean.
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by Nic Sheff (2008)
Like 'Permanent Midnight', this memoir offers a raw, unflinching look at addiction and its devastating effects.

by Denis Johnson (1992)
Similar to 'Permanent Midnight', this collection captures a gritty, hallucinatory vision of life on the fringes.

by Anthony Kiedis (2004)
This memoir shares 'Permanent Midnight's' unflinching, first-hand account of a life consumed by addiction and excess.

by Nikki Sixx (2000)
Echoing 'Permanent Midnight', this book provides a visceral, raw exploration of addiction within the rock music scene.

by Philip K. Dick (1977)
Like 'Permanent Midnight', this novel delves into the disorienting psychological effects of drug use and fractured reality.
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