The Best Awful There Is

The Best Awful There Is

Cover to the "The Best Awful" renamed edition
Author Carrie Fisher
Country United States
Language English
Genre Autobiographical novel
Publisher Simon & Schuster
Publication date
January 2004
Media type Print (hardback and paperback)
Pages 269 (hardback edition) & 288 (paperback edition)
ISBN 0-684-80913-3 (hardback edition) & ISBN 0-7432-6930-6 (paperback edition)
OCLC 51086674
813/.54 21
LC Class PS3556.I8115 B4 2003
Preceded by Postcards from the Edge

The Best Awful There Is, or sometimes titled The Best Awful, is a novel by actress and author Carrie Fisher that was published in 2004.

Like most of Fisher's books, this novel is semi-autobiographical and fictionalizes events from her real life. It is said to be a sequel to Postcards from the Edge. It is also said to fictionalize the story of her relationship with the gay agent Bryan Lourd, father of her daughter, Billie Lourd.

The Best Awful There Is was later published with the shorter title The Best Awful and is now largely known by this title.

Plot summary

It is about a bipolar young actress, Suzanne Vale, who married a studio executive, Leland Franklin, who helped her find her "far-flung best self." He then left her, for a man, when their daughter, Honey, was three.

Now, three years later, Vale is a successful TV talk show hostess with a six-year-old daughter, a gay ex-husband, and an aging starlet mother. It is her love for Honey that keeps her going.

When Vale, a recovering drug addict, stops taking her medication, she is plunged into a manic episode. She goes on a search for OxyContin in Tijuana with a tattoo artist friend and new house guest, a clinically depressed patient she met at her psycho-pharmacologist's office.

A psychotic break lands Vale at Shady Lanes, where she is the "latest loony to hit the bin." Despite her mental illness, Vale still has her wit and ability to find irony in every situation as she struggles back from the brink of insanity.

"You entered the hospital broken, found some other like broken patient people, and once in their company, looked down on the other more pathetic inhabitants of the bin you shared, those flying even lower than you and your lo-flung co-conspirators."

Pharmacological facts and scenes from group therapy are revealed. Rather than hide the truths of mental disorders, the humor serves to highlight them.

A happy ending is contrived for Vale and Honey, a sweet little girl, but a little happiness in the midst of all the craziness is a good thing.

Characters in "The Best Awful There Is"

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