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Hardcover High on Arrival Book

ISBN: 143915385X

ISBN13: 9781439153857

High on Arrival

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

Mackenzie Phillips shares "a raw glimpse" (Entertainment Weekly) into her lifelong battle with personal demons and near-fatal addictions--and reveals the shattering truth behind her complex,... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

9 ratings

4 stars

I read this when it first came out. Mac is lucky to be alive.

A sad life of drug abuse and incest

I wasn't going to give this 5 stars at first because the book was like a rollercoaster for me, where she would go back and forth then back and forth again on the same path of drugs and abuse over and over again. Then I realized she has a disease and every day is a struggle for her and how it must have been a struggle for her to write this book. It is indeed a shocking tell all book of a drug addicts life with no actual ending and I can't help but wonder how she is today. Her struggle is real. It is a very sad and graphic story of a child surrounded by the drug world at a very early age and getting drawn into this world. It definitely is a page turner but did leave me emotionally spent in some parts. Her failure to realize the damage she was doing to her body and career. The Harm she was doing to her child. I only wish her the best. I really do.

Had no idea of the turmoil this poor girl lived through. This is not a book that is sugar coated.

Excellent book, well written and to the point. I hope Mackenzie Phillips finds peace and closure, and is able to find happiness. Lord knows she deserves to after all the hell she lived through.

Courageous Memoir

Grew up watching Mackenzie Phillips on One Day At A Time and have always enjoyed the Mamas & Papas. Always curious about other’s paths and the story behind their decisions. The buzz around this book always mentions an admission of a consensual relationship between the author and her father. That’s not what this book is about. It’s about the era of free love and drugs of the 60s and the how the children of these times were often left to their own devices. This story is about how we normalize abuse because that’s what it was, abuse. She’s had a long, tough road and I appreciate the courage it took to pull back the veil knowing much of her family would deny it and distance themselves from her. Glad she made it and know her story helped many fellow survivors.

High on Arrival, a memoir of a life of drug use by Mackenzie Phillips

I know that it took a tremendous amount of bravery for Ms. Phillips to write with such detail about her lifelong battle with drug addiction and her dysfunctional and abusive relationship with her father. Although her story is written with much passion and insight, it increasingly began to wear me down. Throughout her story she vacillates between justifying her irresponsible behavior and accepting responsibility for it. For me, the book is very much like a seesaw, which is probably how her life on drugs was, a constant fluctuation of being in control one minute and our of control the next. Of her need to be clean and her need to feel good. The feeling good always wins out. There are parts of the book that I felt were too repetative, indicative of the saying, "same thing, different day." As well, there are parts of her story which caused me to put the book down and not pick it up again for several days. I did pick it up and I did finish it because the book deserves it. I was also a big fan of the sitcom One Day at a Time in which she played Julie Cooper, until she was fired, twice, due to her addiction. If a reader has any kind of drug or alchohol addiction, or a dysfunctional relationship with their patents, this book would a perfect read for them. Ms. Phillip writes with a straight forward honesty, yet, for me, I grew tired of reading about the multitude of needles and suringes she constantly needed. Page after page, the story and circumstances are the same. Ms. Phillips is a smart, assertive woman and I hope she lives a long deserved life, clean, free from drugs and healthy.

Finally her story is told! This is one gut wrenching, soul searching book!

Mackenzie Phillips is one brave lady. She has FINALLY released her demons and NOW it all makes sense. Like she said "this is her truth" and nobody can take it, change it or make it into something else. She lived it. She has inspired me to let go of my own dysfunctional upbringing and I sincerely thank her from the bottom of my heart. Peace be to you Ms. Phillips in this life and the next. Much love from a fellow survivor.

A Compelling Read That Puts The Allegations in Important Context.

You can't have paid any attention to the internet or TV for the last few days without hearing the revelations Mackenzie Phillips has made about her relationship with her father. Based on this, people have made decisions on whether or not they find her to be truthful. Having read the book I believe Mackenzie to be self-aware and compelling. Nobody knows for sure, only Mackenzie and only her dad, but her story, read in the context of the whole book, reads as truth. Even if she'd not revealed her incestuous relationship with her dad, this still would be an interesting (5 star) read, a story about a roller coaster life and the pain of addiction. However, all the details together make that detail that every one is gossiping about seem plausible. Mackenzie grew up with a father who never parented, who only got angry at her taking drugs when it was his collectible LSD and not the stuff strewn casually around their home, who only asked that his 13-year-old daughter -- who lived with him -- be home one night a week, and so many more jaw-dropping stories. The relationship was so very inappropriate before it was INAPPROPRIATE that it gives credence to the latter. Her relationship with her father was about lines crossed, non-existent rules, and promises broken. I don't think anyone could even casually follow her life and not wonder why a woman who was given so much couldn't stay off drugs. After reading this, I think most people will come to an understanding of why she's struggled so hard and how she could sink so low and perhaps, in the end, how she can still say she loves and forgives him -- why she needs this for her own sobriety. One of the best reads this year. Memorable, with too many anecdotes to share here! Tales of golden days of casual drug use/flower power descending into dark days of self-destruction. (I wish Mackenzie Phillips the best and hope she will, at last, be healed and that her story will help others.)

"Absolutely Shocking"

Not since Christina Crawford wrote her tell-all story "Mommie Dearest" about the physical and mental abuse she endured at the hands of her famous mother Joan Crawford, has a book about famous people rocked Hollywood. Mackenzie Phillips has written an honest and brave account of her life with Mamas and the Papas frontman John Phillips who was her father. In the book Mackenzie discusses candidly her drug problem that has plagued her most of her life and how her father introduced her to cocaine when she was ten. She eventually started smoking pot and drinking heavily and ultimately became very promiscuous often having sex with many of her dad's friends including Mick Jagger. Mackenzie also recounts her eventual childhood stardom on the CBS sitcom "One Day At A Time" and how her drug use led her to being fired from the show as she would often show up stoned to film scenes. The most harrowing part of the book is her allegation of her father raping her one night while she was past out cold from doing too many drugs. She reveals waking up after being "out" only to find her father having sex with her. Her drug problem became so severe that she actually allowed her father to have sex with her for over ten years until she found herself pregnant. She didn't know if the father was her fiance or her dad so she had the pregnancy terminated. The greatest part of the book is that she accepts her faults and mistakes herself and doesn't blame anyone for her shortcomings. She was even able to forgive her father for all the harm he inflicted upon her before he died in 2001. Rather than be a book that seeks revenge on someone "High On Arrival" is a book about facing one's past, dealing with their mistakes, and starting over fresh. I have always admired Mackenzie Phillips and I admire her more as her book is a lesson for all of us in understanding why a person starts doing drugs, why they become hooked on it, and how, if not handled properly, one can be destroyed by them. The fact that Mackenzie Phillips is still alive to write such a memoir is testimony in her strength as a human being and she should be applauded.

If You're a Doubter, Read the Book, Watch Her TV Interviews

This is story of a privileged young woman who was exposed to sex, drugs, and adult activities at a very young age, who grew up way too fast under irresponsible parents, who suffered abuse from somebody she trusted and loved. Her written words have a LOT OF PAIN behind them. But when you see her tell them to Oprah, it is even more sad, more painful. I found myself tearing up at times, because this woman was so damaged and still in so much emotional turmoil. As difficult as it is to believe that Papa John would do such things, all you have to do is read her book and watch her interviews on TV to see the result of his abuse. Hers was a difficult story to tell, and from some reviews, naysayers who state Mackenzie is making this up, trying to get money, attention, whatever. For the doubters, have you read her book? Have you seen her on TV, talking about this book and its contents? You could see how Mackenzie was struggling to let these demons out in public; at times her hands were shaking. And the difficulty she had with her interview with Oprah was revealing in itself: nobody would go out in public and tell such stories if they weren't true. Her book is searingly honest and hard to read, but very brave. People don't like to hear about their heroes or stars having flaws or doing such awful things behind closed doors. This is true of John Phillips. His image was that of a gentle, peace-loving hippie, talented musician, and founder of The Mamas and The Papas. People cannot rectify that image with that of a drugged-out, irresponsible parent who thought it was ok to carry on an incestuous relationship with his daughter. It was shocking enough to read that John Phillips used drugs in front of his daughter and taught her how to shoot up. But to carry on a ten-year incestuous relationship is beyond the pale. It is amazing Mackenzie is still around to tell her story, as her life has been a drug-fueled struggle to exorcise these demons she kept hidden inside for all these years. I hope now she will be able finally heal and move on to a better life.
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