Crazy Enough
by Storm Large
Free Press / Simon & Schuster
Hardcover
From the publisher website:
Yes, Storm Large is her real name, though she’s been called many things. As  a performer, the majority of descriptions have led with “Amazon,”  “Powerhouse,” “a six-foot Vargas pinup come to life.” Playboy called  her a “punk goddess.” You’d never know she used to be called “Little  S”—the mini-me to her beautiful and troubled mother, Suzi.
Storm  spent most of her childhood visiting her mother in mental institutions  and psych wards. Suzi’s diagnosis changed with almost every doctor visit,  ranging from schizophrenia to bipolar disorder to multiple personality  disorder to depression. As hard as it was not having her at home, Storm  and her brothers knew that it was a lot safer to have their beautiful but  unreliable mom in a facility somewhere. Then one day, nine-year-old  Storm jokingly asked one of her mother’s doctors, “I’m not going to be  crazy like that, right?” To which he replied, “Well, yes. It’s  hereditary. You absolutely will end up like your mother. But not until  your twenties.”
That was the starting gun for a wild race to  escape what Storm believed to be her future. Desperate to delay the  lonely sickness and sadness that haunted her mother, Storm stomped her  size-twelve boots straight toward as much sex, drugs, and rock ’n’ roll  as she could find. Losing her virginity at thirteen, she sprinted through  her young life, trying to smoke and fuck and wail away the madness that she  feared would catch up to her at any moment. Instead, she found herself  deep in a life of craziness of her own making.
Then, in her  twenties, with nothing to live for and a growing heroin addiction, Storm  accepted a chance invitation to sing with a friend’s band. That night she  reconnected with her long-term love of music, and it dragged her back  from the edge. She has been singing and slinging inappropriate banter at  audiences worldwide ever since. Storm’s story of growing up with a mental  time bomb hanging around her neck veers from frightening to inspiring,  sometimes all in one sentence. But her strength, charisma, and raw  musical talent gave her the will to overcome it all. With tremendous  honesty and tremendous dirty language, Crazy Enough is about an  artist’s journey of realizing that the mistakes that make, break and  remake us are worth far more than our flailing attempts to live a life we think is “normal.” It is a love song to the twisted, flawed parts in all  of us and a nod to the grace we find when things fall apart.
 
 
Hey big brother, I have heard of this book, and really want to read it. Now that I read what you said I want to read it more.
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