I just finished Felicia Day's autobiography, You're Never Weird on the Internet (Almost).
As someone who's struggled with game addiction, personally (and deeply) understands the appeal of a virtual self, explored the Internet while it was still a wild frontier, battled depression, grew up in an environment very unlike that of my peers, and enjoys creative endeavors (except she actually finished a screenplay and I haven't written anything of substantial length in years), there was a lot I could appreciate.
As someone who's struggled with game addiction, personally (and deeply) understands the appeal of a virtual self, explored the Internet while it was still a wild frontier, battled depression, grew up in an environment very unlike that of my peers, and enjoys creative endeavors (except she actually finished a screenplay and I haven't written anything of substantial length in years), there was a lot I could appreciate.