Thursday, July 30, 2020
The Well-Readheads Me-Me-Me Memoirs
The Well-Readheads Me-Me-Me Memoirs RJS: Okay, sugar britches, weâre talking about memoirs this week. My relationship status with memoirs is âitâs complicated.â When they are good, theyâre very, very good, but when they are bad, they are horrid. And Iâve read some of both. To start with the good: did you read Townie by Andre Dubus III? I feel like ârawâ and âcandidâ are words that get thrown around A LOT when we talk about memoirs, but theyâre actually justified in this case. It is face-meltingly good. LH: I love Townie! It was interesting to read about where he grew up, because itâs quite close to where I live. And I thought he wrote about his father with a lot more leniency than he warranted it was very classy on A.D.IIIâs part. Quid pro quo, Clarice have you read Five-Finger Discount by Helene Stapinski? Itâs about how she grew up in a family of swindlers in severely corrupt Jersey City.* It is so utterly delightful! *Stapinski grew up in Jersey City in the early seventies I am not claiming Jersey City is still severely corrupt. Iâm sure itâs a lovely place. RJS: No, but it sounds right up my alley, especially after my love affair with The Mark Inside, which is all about the evolution of con artistry. Maybe itâs the ex-psychologist in me, but I have a thing about mental health-related memoirsI canât resist âem. And man, are there some doozies out there. One awesome one, though, is Emma Forrestâs Your Voice in My Head, which is just as much about the impact a good therapist can have on personâs life as itâs about dealing with bipolar disorder. Do you have any memoir subject kryptonites? LH: Not really. Iâll read anything if it looks interesting. I do tend to pick up memoirs by people who create things I love, like musicians and authors. One of the best memoirs Iâve read recently is Rat Girl by Kristin Hersh, a founding member of Throwing Muses. It knocked the socks right off my brain. Itâs from her journals when she was a teenager, the year she started the band, was diagnosed with bipolar disorder and found out she was pregnant. She writes beautifully, with a really unique voice. RJS: I sort of go in the opposite directionwhile it can be fun for me to read about writersâ and artistsâ lives, I usually gravitate more toward memoirs by people who had pretty normal lives but find a way to pull out the humor or dysfunction or extraordinary moments. Like, thereâs nothing really remarkable about dealing with depression, but Emma Forrest tells it remarkably in Your Voice in My Head (yep, two mentions in one installmentthe book is that good); ditto for going to rehab, but Augusten Burroughsâ Dry is fantastic. And Shalom Auslanderâs religious upbringing probably wasnât significantly weirder than many, but he makes it super compelling in Foreskinâs Lament. Tell me youâve read it! LH: Iâve read it. Okay, Iâm lying, but I did read his new novel, Hope: A Tragedy, which is a scream. I have read some memoirs where extraordinary things happen to people the first that comes to mind is The Bearâs Embrace by Patricia Van Tighem. Van Tighem and her husband were attacked by a grizzly bear while hiking in the Canadian Rockies, and suffered severe injuries. I read it at least a decade ago, but I can still remember her describing the sound of the bearâs teeth scraping her skull. DO NOT WANT. I also enjoy reading memoirs about places and things I know nothing about. One of my very favorite memoirs is Donât Letâs Go to the Dogs Tonight by Alexandra Fuller, about how she grew up in South Africa during the Rhodesian Civil War. Three words: Ah. Stound. Ding. RJS: Man, I love that title. I havenât read the book yet, but every time I hear the title, I think, âAnyone who can come up with a title like that *must* have written an amazing book.â Thereâs something really perspective-giving about memoirs for meI love being pulled outside of myself and shown evidence that people go through really incredible and difficult and dangerous things and come out okay. Makes me realize that my stresses, no matter how real, are pretty insignificant. And then, of course, thereâs the voyeurism. If Iâm honest, thatâs what really draws me to memoirsIâm nosy, and I canât resist a chance to walk around inside someone elseâs head, hear their thoughts, see their dysfunctions, and maybe judge them a little. But just a little. Mostly, Iâm grateful that people are brave enough to put it all out there. LH: I see a tell-all book in your future. But what would it be called? RJS: Donât Make a Book Blogger Take Off Her Earringsand Other Tales from the Interweb. Or maybe Damn It Feels Good to Be a Ginger. Actually, the thought of writing a memoir makes me break out in hell-to-the-no hives. I prefer my relationship with tell-alls to be one-sided. They give, I take. What about you? LH: You little life-story leech! Mine would be Adderall That and a Bag of Chips. Or maybe The Hiss in Whisky. Wait, no Epic Nerdpurr: Tales of a Velocireader. But I, too, feel like Iâd never write a memoir. Maybe if I do something really exciting one day, like fight martians while riding a giant space battlecat. I have been playing around at writing essays, but lately, Iâve been in a bit of a slump. It feels like everything has already been written about. My friend was trying to talk me down the other night when I was particularly whiny. He says itâs all about how you say it, not what youâre saying. âAnd not everything has been written about,â he said. âHas everyone sat in a bathtub full of Froot Loops and milk? Has everyone accidentally stuck their butt in Daryl Hallâs face?â âNo,â I sniffed. âProbably not accidentally.â Friends are the best. RJS: I *really* want to know the Daryl Hall story, but I know how you like to be mysterious. So letâs end it here and keep folks guessing. Your turn, readers. What do you love about memoirs? What are your favorites? Sign up for True Story to receive nonfiction news, new releases, and must-read forthcoming titles.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.