The Crazy Great Journey is a raw, uplifting memoir of survival, vision, and the unshakable belief in the power of stories. B. Alan Bourgeois—an indie author, gay man, and literary advocate—pulls back the curtain on a life marked by heartbreak, resilience, and relentless service to others. From writing his first story in prison to founding the Texas Authors Museum, Bourgeois has lived every word of his legacy with passion and grit. With candor and courage, he recounts homelessness, loss, and rejection, but also moments of triumph, vision, and community.

This memoir is not about fame—it’s about purpose. It’s a deeply personal story for anyone who’s ever felt like an outsider, dared to chase a dream, or fought to build something bigger than themselves.

If you believe stories can change the world—start with this one.

REVIEW:
The Crazy Great Journey is a lean, unsentimental memoir tracing how a gay ex-con and abuse survivor becomes a relentless advocate for Texas authors and readers. From a first published story written in prison to founding a small press, then the Texas Association of Authors, DEAR Texas, and ultimately the Texas Authors Museum, the book follows a life repeatedly knocked flat by financial collapse, homelessness, and grief—including the loss of the author’s mother’s ashes—yet stubbornly oriented toward service.

Told in four concise chapters and an epilogue, the narrative favors directness over sentiment, compressing decades of work, failure, and reinvention into a clear arc: discover the power of story, suffer the consequences of being visibly queer and formerly incarcerated, and choose, again and again, to build structures that help other writers be seen. Along the way, the book addresses rising censorship in Texas and the creation of the ReadSafe Ratings program as a tactical response, framing literary advocacy as both cultural work and quiet resistance.

Readers seeking lush prose and deep scene-by-scene reconstruction may find the style almost reportorial, but those who appreciate blunt honesty and a strong moral compass will likely find it compelling. This is a story for people who have been told they are “too much” or “not enough” and kept going anyway—and for anyone curious what it really costs, in time, money, and emotional wear, to build a sanctuary for stories in hostile times.
= True Voice Review

 

Purchase here: The Crazy Great Journey: A Short Memoir