The book of Sheen A memoir

Charlie Sheen

Book - 2025

For the first time, the star of Platoon, Wall Street, Major League and Two and a Half Men writes the story of his extraordinary life in an unfiltered memoir.

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2nd Floor New Shelf 791.43028092/Sheen (NEW SHELF) Checked In
2nd Floor New Shelf 791.43028092/Sheen (NEW SHELF) Checked In
Subjects
Genres
Autobiographies
BIO013000
PER010000
BIO005000
Biographies
Published
New York : Gallery Books 2025.
Language
English
Main Author
Charlie Sheen (author)
Edition
First Gallery Books hardcover edition
Physical Description
359 pages, 32 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations (chiefly color) ; 24 cm
ISBN
9781668075289
Contents unavailable.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Retracing the highs and lows of a life in movies and television. In his boisterous and breezy memoir, Sheen starts with his birth, when he was nearly strangled by his umbilical cord, and goes on to a childhood in and around Los Angeles, where he made home videos with other showbiz kids. Along with his mother and three siblings, he frequently traveled to locations where his father, Martin Sheen, was filming, notably the set ofApocalypse Now. In an account laden with expletives and endearingly weird spelling choices ("dood," "kool"), some of the actor's most riveting chapters evoke his own stints on film sets, particularly his brutal experiences during the filming of Oliver Stone'sPlatoon, in which the author starred. Though he went on to play parts in many more movies and in TV shows likeTwo and a Half Men, he turned his attention primarily to booze, drugs, gambling on sports, and encounters with sex workers. Don't look for the usual redemption narrative here. Though Sheen does spend the last few pages of the book on what he says have been eight recent years of sobriety, undertaken for the sake of his children and grandchildren, he devotes most of the book to an exhaustive and sometimes exhausting survey of life on the edge. Despite many hours at meetings, he doesn't have the respect for Alcoholics Anonymous--that "medieval gibberish club"--that he has for the many escorts he employed, whose charges he views as "a convenience-tax for a guaranteed outcome the other dating scenarios couldn't offer." Sheen's three marriages zip in and out of the narrative with dizzying speed, leaving the reader no wiser about the women involved. A gleefully unrepentant ride through decades of bad behavior. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.