Dark Days, Bright Nights: Surviving the Las Vegas Storm Drains

Author:   Matthew O'Brien
Publisher:   Central Recovery Press
ISBN:  

9781949481426


Pages:   240
Publication Date:   30 January 2021
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
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Dark Days, Bright Nights: Surviving the Las Vegas Storm Drains


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Overview

The hundreds of people living in the flood channels of Las Vegas have provided one of the more fascinating and enduring international stories of the past decade. This underground community has received plenty of news coverage and dramatic portrayals by CSI, Criminal Minds, and the Jason Bourne franchise. But the fact that dozens of tunnel dwellers have clawed their way out of the drains and turned their lives around has received far less attention. Dark Days, Bright Nights is the follow-up to the bestselling Beneath the Neon and shares the harrowing stories of Sin City's most marginalized people, from bottoming out in homelessness to mending relationships with family and adjusting to jobs, housing, and sobriety. These redemption stories cast light on a rarely seen side of Las Vegas and offer a portrait of homelessness and recovery in America. They are the happy, though not Hollywood, endings to the infamous tunnel tale, documented through stark photographs and unflinchingly honest personal accounts.

Full Product Details

Author:   Matthew O'Brien
Publisher:   Central Recovery Press
Imprint:   Central Recovery Press
Weight:   0.285kg
ISBN:  

9781949481426


ISBN 10:   1949481425
Pages:   240
Publication Date:   30 January 2021
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

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Kirkus Reviews DARK DAYS, BRIGHT NIGHTS: Surviving the Las Vegas Storm Drains By Matthew O'Brien A journalist and social worker shares stories of how a group of flood channel-dwelling homeless people found their way back to society. In this oral-history follow-up to Beneath the Neon, O'Brien's examination of homelessness in subterranean Las Vegas, he chronicles how one group of homeless people were able to leave tunnel life behind. The author structures each of the chapters around a specific question, to which he elicited responses from men and women who had survived everything from poverty to substance abuse during their time underground. His subjects ranged from teenagers to people in their 60s and came from a wide variety of socio-economic backgrounds. They included drug addicts, military veterans, and ex-cons, many of whom were survivors of dysfunctional or violent childhoods or some other traumatic or personally debilitating event. Two of the most intriguing figures O'Brien interviewed include Szmauz, a young musician from a loving family in the mountains of southern New Hampshire, and Ande, who has a doctorate in organizational behavior and human factors [and] lived in the drains for seven years, the last while battling breast cancer. O'Brien asked his interviewees questions that encouraged them to discuss such topics as their childhoods and adolescent and adult years; how they became homeless; and how they managed to navigate the dangerous curves...hairpin turns...roadblocks and detours that they faced on a daily basis. Without exception, each of the author's interviewees have faced significant obstacles. Many, like Becky, Iron, and Manny, backslid into self-destructive behaviors (notes Iron, I do the least amount of wrong I can. That's the simplest way to put it); one, Jazz, lost his beloved girlfriend to a tunnel flood. Against the odds, all found a way back to sobriety (or close to it) and a more secure life. Powerful and relentlessly honest, the interviews explode myths surrounding homelessness while promoting compassionate views of the growing number of homeless Americans. Compelling reading about what is a depressingly evergreen societal ill.


Kirkus Reviews DARK DAYS, BRIGHT NIGHTS: Surviving the Las Vegas Storm Drains By Matthew O'Brien A journalist and social worker shares stories of how a group of flood channel-dwelling homeless people found their way back to society. In this oral-history follow-up to Beneath the Neon, O'Brien's examination of homelessness in subterranean Las Vegas, he chronicles how one group of homeless people were able to leave tunnel life behind. The author structures each of the chapters around a specific question, to which he elicited responses from men and women who had survived everything from poverty to substance abuse during their time underground. His subjects ranged from teenagers to people in their 60s and came from a wide variety of socio-economic backgrounds. They included drug addicts, military veterans, and ex-cons, many of whom were survivors of dysfunctional or violent childhoods or some other traumatic or personally debilitating event. Two of the most intriguing figures O'Brien interviewed include Szmauz, a young musician from a loving family in the mountains of southern New Hampshire, and Ande, who has a doctorate in organizational behavior and human factors [and] lived in the drains for seven years, the last while battling breast cancer. O'Brien asked his interviewees questions that encouraged them to discuss such topics as their childhoods and adolescent and adult years; how they became homeless; and how they managed to navigate the dangerous curves...hairpin turns...roadblocks and detours that they faced on a daily basis. Without exception, each of the author's interviewees have faced significant obstacles. Many, like Becky, Iron, and Manny, backslid into self-destructive behaviors (notes Iron, I do the least amount of wrong I can. That's the simplest way to put it); one, Jazz, lost his beloved girlfriend to a tunnel flood. Against the odds, all found a way back to sobriety (or close to it) and a more secure life. Powerful and relentlessly honest, the interviews explode myths surrounding homelessness while promoting compassionate views of the growing number of homeless Americans. Compelling reading about what is a depressingly evergreen societal ill. This is the story of lives gone wrong, of people who have fallen, who are flawed and trying. They are touching and human and alive on the page. This is the story of the other side of Vegas; it is the story of what happened to America. Charles Bock, New York Times bestselling author of Beautiful Children and Alice & Oliver A profound, moving, and inspiring book about the world beneath Las Vegas and how human beings can survive and overcome the toughest challenges in life. Johann Hari, author of Chasing the Scream: The First and Last Days of the War on Drugs With the heart of an artist and the ear of a journalist, Matthew O'Brien first shined a light on the homeless people who exist in the storm tunnels of Las Vegas. In Dark Days, Bright Nights, O'Brien brings their heart-wrenching stories to the surface and offers us an unforgettable portrait of a slice of humanity most would never encounter. John L. Smith, author of The Westside Slugger: Joe Neal's Lifelong Fight for Social Justice Using the unfiltered words of the homeless in Las Vegas, Matt O'Brien has compacted, in some two hundred-forty pages, volumes of truth, the kind that sociologists can't possibly reveal in studies and statistics. I will never look at a homeless person again and see someone with a sign pandering for money. Instead, I will see a caring heart trapped inside a human who's troubled life has been a struggle against the forces of the world and against him or herself, addiction being the greatest of those. H. Lee Barnes, award-winning author of ten books, most recently Life Is a Country Western Song Matthew O'Brien has expertly pieced together a compelling narrative that tells the tale of human life in the storm tunnels beneath the glitter of Las Vegas. From the dwellers' early lives to adulthood, from why they went underground to how they survived or didn't, these stories of celebration will tug at your heartstrings. Cathy Scott, journalist and author of The Crime Books and The Killing of Tupac Shakur


Author Information

Matthew O’Brien is a journalist and social worker who has been considered the foremost authority on homelessness in the Las Vegas storm drains for the past fifteen years. In 2009, O’Brien founded Shine a Light, a not-for-project organization that provides food, clothing, housing, and counseling services to those in the drains.

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