The Vacuum Cleaner is Clean
He considers hiring a shrink to help him understand who he is, but ultimately decides that the person most qualified to do that is himself. His search for who he is, and who he wants to become, is chronicled in this memoir.
Brutally heartbreaking one chapter, uproariously funny the next, The Vacuum Cleaner is Clean attempts to answer one question: Can people change? To do that, he goes back all the way to the point where his life starting getting weird at age 9, and then takes the reader on a ... More
Brutally heartbreaking one chapter, uproariously funny the next, The Vacuum Cleaner is Clean attempts to answer one question: Can people change? To do that, he goes back all the way to the point where his life starting getting weird at age 9, and then takes the reader on a ... More
He considers hiring a shrink to help him understand who he is, but ultimately decides that the person most qualified to do that is himself. His search for who he is, and who he wants to become, is chronicled in this memoir.
Brutally heartbreaking one chapter, uproariously funny the next, The Vacuum Cleaner is Clean attempts to answer one question: Can people change? To do that, he goes back all the way to the point where his life starting getting weird at age 9, and then takes the reader on a bizarre, intimate storytelling rampage all the way up until age 29, when his life started getting desperate.
Unapologetically whiny (“My parents suck!”) and ruthlessly self-effacing (‘I suck!”), Keith succeeds in introducing himself to his demons (Earl, Tina, JMoney and Chachi), getting serious about taking life less seriously, and ultimately, putting the fun in dysfunctional. Less
Brutally heartbreaking one chapter, uproariously funny the next, The Vacuum Cleaner is Clean attempts to answer one question: Can people change? To do that, he goes back all the way to the point where his life starting getting weird at age 9, and then takes the reader on a bizarre, intimate storytelling rampage all the way up until age 29, when his life started getting desperate.
Unapologetically whiny (“My parents suck!”) and ruthlessly self-effacing (‘I suck!”), Keith succeeds in introducing himself to his demons (Earl, Tina, JMoney and Chachi), getting serious about taking life less seriously, and ultimately, putting the fun in dysfunctional. Less
