Confessions Of a Fallen

Catholic SchoolBoy

He built empires and burned them down. He traded sacramental wine for lines of coke, the confessional for a jail cell. This is the testament of a man who mapped the darkest corners of the human soul and fought his way back, not with a whisper, but with a battle cry. His story is a raw nerve, exposed and electric.

About The Book

Confessions of A Fallen Catholic Schoolboy

This is the unvarnished truth of a life lived in the extremes. From the disciplined pews of a Catholic schoolboy to the hedonistic frenzy of rock star parties and the cold silence of a prison cell, Guy Scarpelli’s journey is a masterclass in survival. He built a millionaire empire as a top sales agent, only to watch it crumble through a vortex of addiction and reckless choices. This is his raw testimony of soaring success and catastrophic failure…

About The Author

Guy Scarpelli

Guy Scarpelli is a man who has lived a dozen lifetimes in one. A product of a strict Italian-Catholic upbringing in New Jersey, he spent decades running from that foundation, only to have it ultimately save him. He is a living paradox: a former millionaire sales superstar and a convicted felon, a chaotic force of hedonism and an honorable Fourth-Degree Knight of Columbus…

Read Our Insightful Blogs

Explore soulful reflections, healing wisdom, and celestial teachings inspired by The Catholic SchoolBoy.

Readers Are Talking
See what moved them, shocked them, and stayed with them long after they finished the book.
Maria Rodriguez
I couldn't put this down. It's not just a wild story about partying; it's about family and that complicated Italian Catholic guilt. The parts about his mom and the whole dynamic with his brother really got to me. It's so raw and honest about how your upbringing shapes you, even when you're trying your hardest to run from it.
James Wilcox
I picked this up for the crazy stories, and yeah, they're there in full color. But what stuck with me was the 'dash' metaphor. It's such a simple but powerful idea. It made me stop and think about my own life in a way I wasn't expecting. This book is way deeper than just a memoir about a wild ride.
Becky Simmons
If you grew up in the '70s and '80s, this is a time capsule. The music, the toys, the cultural references—it's a total nostalgia trip. It's more than just a biography; it's like reliving an era through the eyes of someone who saw it all, from the innocence of Saturday morning cartoons to the chaos of the disco years. Loved it.