Description
The Rocky Road stands for its unflinching honesty, delivered with a distinctively raw, sardonic wit. The writing has a conversational flow, but it's not casual in a throwaway sense-it's precise in its emotional undercurrent, using humour as both a shield and a scalpel. The tone is often confessional, yet there's no plea for sympathy- just a clear-eyed confrontation with truth.
At its heart, it's a prison memoir, but that undersells its richness. It's a story about addiction, masculinity, and the long, slow war between self-destruction and self-awareness. What makes it powerful is that Richard doesn't pretend to be a hero- or even particularly likable at times- and that's precisely why you trust him.
It's not preachy, and it doesn't try to tidy up the narrative in to a redemption arc. Instead, it lets the mess speak, trusting the reader to draw meaning from chaos. The moments of dark humour land with the weight of experience, not performance, which they resonate more deeply.
This book will speak most to readers who appreciate gritty memoirs, prison literature, addiction narratives, or unpolished truths told with style. It could easily appeal to fans of, David Keenan, Damian Barr, Hunter S Thompson or people who loved trainspotting but wanted to know what happened ten years later, for real.
It's also ripe for adaption, especially in the hands of someone like Guy Ritchie- not just for the crime elements, but for the character depth and twisted tenderness that underlie the gruff exterior.
Details
Publisher -
Language -
Paperback
Contributors
Author
Richard East
Lynne Walker
Laura Jones-Rivera
Published Date -
ISBN - 9781068552809
Dimensions - 19.8 x 12.9 x 2.5 cm
Page Count - 316
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