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Memoir / Autobiography

  • Alabama Blue: A Southern Gothic Memoir

    by Toni Pacini

    Rating: 8.00

    Idea: In Alabama Blue, Toni Pacini recollects her abusive childhood and the violence she endured and survived, as well as the psychological and emotional scarring that led her to make sometimes catastrophic choices as an adult. It also depicts one of the most touching stories of a human being rescued from the depths of an emotional abyss by the pure, uncomplicated adoration of a canine soulmate in recent memory.

    Prose/Style: The events in Pacini's story are often horrifying and deeply sad; however, her gaze is unflinching, and she has a knack for crafting idiosyncratic dialogue and the unexpected turn of phrase that can inject a note of wry humor at any moment. She has a story worth telling, and she tells it well.

    Originality: Like Mary Karr and several other recent memoirists, Pacini survived a childhood blasted by parental alcoholism and mental illness, as well as horrific sexual abuse by a predatory acquaintance. Her book shows her journey from wounded child to becoming an adult who is able to reflect on her life and take pride in having become a woman who can love, live and forgive.

    Character Development/Execution: It took courage to write a book this graphic in its depiction of the ugliness of life under the reign of a desperately sick, mentally ill alcoholic parent. It took still more to depict the missteps a child raised in such a home inevitably makes as an adult, and to take responsibility for them and for her own healing. That the child Pacini describes grew up desperate to be loved is not surprising; that she became a woman able to give love deeply and wholeheartedly is miraculous.

  • Idea: Allen's gripping account of the Khmer Rouge genocide is both essential and beautifully told. Earlier sections that portray relative peace during Allen's Cambodian childhood are generally used to strong effect.

    Prose/Style: Minimalist and urgent, Allen's writing style mirrors the life-or-death situations to which she and her family were subjected.

    Originality: This memoir is unusual in that it provides a rare, in-depth account of a brutal event already in danger of being forgotten. The lack of chronology is also unique, although after the death of the narrator's father, its utilization becomes less effective.

    Character Development/Execution: Allen can hardly be blamed for focusing more on the events than the people affected by them; after all, there are so many events to be covered. That said, insight into this story's "characters" and the reasons for their actions, beyond a survival instinct, is uncommon.

    Blurb: The Girl Who Said Goodbye: A Memoir of a Khmer Rouge Survivor by Heather Allen gives a detailed account of the Khmer Rouge genocides that is both harrowing and beautiful. Readers are sure to tear through the story, deeply invested in each of the lives of Allen's family and loved ones, along with Allen's life itself. Occasional sections portraying Allen's life in Cambodia prior to the unrest provide a welcome balance and also lend a lovely humanity to the overall story.

  • Idea: This is an engaging memoir, both in terms of the growth of the brothers and also in the physical descriptions of the trail. As one of Nate's philosophical thoughts puts it: "the simplicity of trail life felt similar to my life in Iraq... living close to the bone, close to the earth."

    Prose/Style: The writing is clear and simple for the most part, which proves effective; at other times it is quite poetic and descriptive.

    Originality: Coming-of-age texts are not unusual; however, this one based on hiking the Appalachian trail, where a returning military person experiences so many new, intriguing ideas, feels unique. Nate is extremely open-minded and this contributes to the diversity of his life experiences.

    Character Development/Execution: The tale is told chronologically with flashbacks to Nate's time in Iraq. The reader gets to know Nate, Ben and their new "hippie" friend, Dylan, who becomes a sort of mentor to Nate. The 2,180-mile journey takes months and is replete with wonderful views and conversations, bad weather, lack of nourishing food, and stinky clothes and bodies, where the characters get to know both themselves and each other much better.

  • DANCING IN THE NARROWS

    by Anna Penenberg

    Rating: 7.75

    Plot: Dancing in the Narrows is a poignant, memorable book about a young woman's struggle with chronic Lyme disease and her treatment options, as well as the enduring, courageous connection between a mother and daughter in times of grief and crisis.

    Prose/Style: This memoir is well-written, gripping, and emotionally resonant. 

    Originality: While books addressing the impacts of disease are familiar, Penenberg’s memoir is set apart from others in the genre by her strong prose and well-drawn figures, as well as the focus on a condition that, while wide-spread, is rarely the topic of memoir.

    Character/Execution: The mother and daughter here come across clearly and vividly, but primarily in relationship to the disease and how it has changed both of their lives. Readers will be moved by the sacrifices both women have had to make in the face of this often misunderstood and frequently devastating. disease.

  • Lou Who?

    by Louise Johnson

    Rating: 7.75

    Idea: While funny, powerful, frank, and interesting, Lou's story--especially the focus on dating--can become repetitive at times and slow down the narrative. Her interactions with friends, family, and coworkers are glossed over, which prohibits readers from seeing how these relationships also contribute to the strong sense of self and purpose she attains at the end of the memoir.

    Prose/Style: Conversational and extremely personal, Lou's voice shines in this memoir. She's also self-deprecating and honestly self-assessing, which brings a nice emotional depth to her self-awakening and creates a strong picture of who she is. It also draws readers into the narrative and makes them root for her successes, both in romance and in life.

    Originality: Lou shares her post-divorce romantic travails in a new country--the good and bad--with honesty and humor. While her romantic relationships compel with funny anecdotes and emotional break-ups, her growth through relationships with others aside from romantic partners gets short shrift.

    Character Development/Execution: Lou's voice and personality are dominant, as they should be. Her characterization is fully formed and reveals all of her complexities, especially in regard to her sense of self and her romantic life. The supporting characters would benefit from more definition and depth. The story would be more emotionally engaging with a stronger sense of how her friends and family helped contribute to her journey of self-actualization.

  • Idea: Author Norman Weeks's memoir is a deeply introspective narrative presented in an epistolary format. Weeks reflects on his early formative experiences in an orphanage; travels as an adolescent; his psychological development; and how literature has shaped his identity as an individual and as an author. 

    Prose: Weeks writes in a formal, yet warm tone that vividly recounts memories and significant moments from his past. The text somewhat assumes a reader's previous knowledge of the author and his work. Abundant literary references are laced throughout the text, while playful passages (notably, the author's imagined conversation with God), provide additional texture.

    Originality: The choice to draft the work as a letter is an intriguing one. The author provides a unique perspective on 20th-century events as seen through the gaze of a writer, intellectual, and a flawed individual seeking to define himself and his legacy.

    Character/Execution: While Weeks writes with honest candor and self-reflection, readers may not gain a truly intimate sense of his character. Weeks's memoir will be best enjoyed by readers familiar with his writings who seek greater insight into his creative development.
     

  • The Girlfriend Mom, A Memoir

    by Dani Alpert

    Rating: 7.75

    Idea: Told from a humorous perspective, this work is based in a strong premise. Not many memoirs focus on the relationship between children and a live-in girlfriend.

    Prose/Style: The author is an effective and clear writer, often funny and brutally honest. It is easy for readers to become involved in her life and in her text.

    Originality: While this book feels quite original, it may only garner a niche audience of women who have found themselves in this exact situation.

    Character/Execution: The narrator's character is well-developed as is the personality of Tyler. However, Julian's character is never made quite clear. He seems on one hand lenient with his kids, but controlling and manipulative with the narrator.

  • Unreal: Adventures of a Family's Global Life

    by Phil McDonald

    Rating: 7.50

    Idea: McDonald’s “journey memoir” unfolds chronologically and engagingly, as the reader follows his career moves and adventures with his family in exotic settings across the globe, never knowing what dangers or challenges might lurk beyond the next corner.

    Prose/Style: McDonald’s prose is direct and candid as he informs readers about the foreign places he encounters and his own professional development. His voice is encouraging and his style readable as he combines personal stories with telling dialogue. The narrative integrates work project outcomes and 60 “takeaway lessons,” which are delivered succinctly and in a manner that doesn’t impact the narrative’s flow.

    Originality: Unreal rises above dry conventions to combine lively adventure with insight into international places and peoples, tips for living abroad with family, and career and personal reflections. McDonald’s accomplishments are inspiring and his “lessons” are most often noteworthy without being cheesy or preachy.

    Character Development/Execution: McDonald and his wife Rebecca are the two main characters who come across admirably in their lives helping others in developing countries, and the foreigners they befriend along the way are diverse and interesting. McDonald and his wife’s decision-making, concerns, responses, and mistakes make them multi-dimensional.

  • The Soul Grows in Darkness

    by Loren E Pedersen

    Rating: 7.50

    Idea: The author’s life story is tightly plotted, feeling almost novelistic in its storytelling techniques. As the memoir progresses, its ideas increase in complexity, but this does not negatively affect  readability at any step along the way.

    Prose/Style: Pedersen has an excellent instinct for selection of detail, and the “plot” feels expertly manicured to its most important moments. The memoir’s more complex ideas, coming later in the narrative, are deftly told through the device of dialogue and succeed in holding readers’ interest.

    Originality: The author’s truly exceptional life makes this a more unusual memoir than many, with many unexpected twists and a surprising level of analytic reflection.

    Character/Execution: Although an incredible number of events take place in this narrative, it is often at the expense of characterization. Few of the characters aside from Pedersen himself feel deeply explored or considered.

  • Wherever the Road Leads

    by Kathryn Lang-Slattery

    Rating: 7.50

    Plot: K. Lang-Slattery's Wherever the Road Leads: A Memoir of Love, Travel, and a Van recreates, in the form of a memoir and travelogue, an around-the-world road trip taken by the author and her husband in the early 1970s. The book draws on the couple's letters, notebooks, drawings, photos, and memories to revisit far-flung locales, their long-gone converted VW microbus, their encounters with friends and strangers, and, touchingly, the couple's relationship as newlyweds discovering how to communicate with each other. Despite the decades that have passed, Slattery evokes the adventure and beauty of Mexico and Central America, then Europe, India, and the Middle East with the eye of a travel writer, though her account is more concerned with the couple's adventures than with the cultures they visited.

    Prose/Style: Lang-Slattery's prose is strongest when she's most specific, which makes a decades-later travel memoir potentially tricky. Passages that detail misadventure or an amusing encounter are written with an engrossing clarity, touched with wisdom and good humor. Some descriptive passages are marvelous, but the book's cheery tone doesn't change much as the couple's travels continue, so it offers little in the way of suspense, mystery, or surprise, even when the couple has to stop to refuel near the "Desert of Death" near Kandahar. Lang-Slattery examines arguments the couple engaged in early in the marriage, which illuminates their relationship for readers, but at other times the dialogue feels somewhat stiff and expository.

    Originality: The story of Wherever the Road Leads is unique to its author and her experiences, and supplemented with fascinating original sketches and photos. Seeing the world through this couple's eyes is certainly a unique treat, though the book itself doesn't always offer much information about what the pair learned, thought, or felt about the world.

    Character Development: For all the book's varied locales and lovely descriptions, Lang-Slattery’s book would be better served to shape the material according to the impulses of a storyteller. The book offers an engaging itinerary and welcome glimpses of the world of the early '70s, but it lacks the narrative throughline of the best memoirs and, outside of the accounts of a few arguments, little sense of the couple's growth and discoveries.

  • Idea: This is a unique travelogue through the American Southwest. The integration of  journal entries and photography provides an engaging window into the history of the land and its people.

    Prose: The book features some strong writing, from well-structured sentences to skillful description. The dialogue can feel somewhat thin, but still conveys the personalities of the speakers well.

    Originality: This work delivers a vital and vivid portrait of one of America’s more ancient places.

    Character/Execution: The book is well crafted, presented in short, readable, chronological chunks, and interspersed with appealing photography.

  • A Story of Karma

    by Michael Schauch

    Rating: 7.25

    Idea: Though this work is uneven, as it progresses, it becomes increasingly fascinating and immersive. The author’s journey is often moving and inspiring, while the setting is vividly conveyed.

    Prose: If at moments prone to being longwinded, Schauch keeps the reader engaged in the story. The author demonstrates a clear gift for creating vibrant imagery.

    Originality: While stories of self-discovery and transcendence through travel are familiar, Schauch offers an original focus via the book’s striking setting and the author’s refusal to idealize the lives and circumstances of those he encounters.

    Character/Execution: Schauch is appropriately cautious in his storytelling, displaying awareness of his position as a cultural outsider and maintaining respect for the nuances of the culture he closely observes. The result is a candid portrait of a place and one individual’s powerful experience of it.

     

  • Autobioscenes & Necrographies

    by Norman Weeks

    Rating: 7.25

    Idea: Weeks’s intriguing personal narrative has a unique structural framework. Rather than focusing on purely autobiographical episodes, the author integrates ‘death stories’ into the narrative. Death, he appears to suggest, is the inevitable counterpart to all lived experience and, therefore, well worth examining.

    Prose/Style: Weeks’s prose is straightforward, though at times stilted. His memorable voice narrates some 65 episodes of his life in a searching, analytical manner that includes moments of dry humor. This episodic telling can sometimes result in a jumpy and underdeveloped narrative.

    Originality: Weeks provides much interesting content and the decision to split the narrative into life and death stories, is a compelling one.

    Character Development/Execution: Weeks’s introspective narrative gives form to his personal development. Despite his in-depth sharing of experiences, he remains somewhat elusive.

  • Idea: The memoir’s premise is quite unique: the situation of having a stroke at 20 years old, as well as experiencing multiple brain surgeries, is unusual and generates interest.

    Prose/Style: There are some graceful metaphors throughout the text, but also some clichés. This book would benefit from a professional copy edit, as the narrative tends to break into expository reminiscence to events far in the past when it should be moving forward; such digression detracts from the momentum. The description of the writer's out-of-body experience during his first brain surgery is the kind of excellent writing the book needs more of in order to fulfill its potential.

    Originality: The narrator is something of an Everyman – an otherwise “normal” millennial, a college student and an athlete, placed in a very not-normal situation by a life-threatening medical condition.

    Character Development/Execution: Many of the characters here would benefit from more development, rather than only being names on the page. The romance with Sydney is sweet and has moments of great charm and nostalgia.

  • Idea: This memoir offers coming-of-age reminiscence told from the perspective of a COVID- quarantined. The author shares her life story beginning with childhood in World War II era England. What follows is a heartwarming glimpse into a fading generation.

    Prose: The writing is clean and organized, containing strong expository and descriptive writing.

    Originality: Essentially a genealogical narrative, the story it tells is unique to the author’s life experience. An enjoyable and interesting family story is told, but it offers little from a structural or thematic standpoint to set it apart from other narratives depicting the author’s generation.

    Character/Execution: While the content of the book doesn’t do anything exceptional to stand out from its contemporaries, what is presented is well-crafted and told in a strong and warm narrative voice. Also included are a good number of photos, which add tremendously to the book.

  • Listen Mama

    by M.S.P. Williams

    Rating: 7.00

    Idea: Listen Mama is a memoir written as a series of journal entries addressed by the author to his mentally ill mother. As the eldest child, Williams, who suffered horrific scarring to his head and face from a burn accident in his infancy, navigates the chaotic waters of his mother’s mental illness, her frequent pregnancies and tumultuous relationships with a series of abusive men, and her financial irresponsibility which often leaves her children hungry or facing eviction, while also facing the challenges of bullying and mockery of the disfigurement left by his burns, compounded by the heartache and indignities visited upon children growing up poor and Black in America.

    Prose/Style: The prose is polished, sometime to the point of being unconvincing in the early sections, where Williams does not always sound like a teenager addressing his mentally ill mother; the early journal entries too often serve as a vehicle for exposition. Williams finds his voice around the midway point of the book, emerging as a genuinely decent, warmly likable man doing his utmost to struggle through more tragedy and bad luck than any human being should be handed in a single lifetime, but always doing so with courage, humor and gallantry.

    Originality: Some readers may be reminded of Lucy Grealy’s Autobiography of a Face, when reading of the pain, disfigurement, and reconstructive surgeries the author endures after suffering severe burn injuries in his infancy. But these are secondary problems in his life, compared to the quotidian misery and anxiety engendered by life with an unstable single parent who has shot one ex-boyfriend and keeps a stash of guns around just in case she wants to shoot another.

    Character Development/Execution: Williams’s emotional enmeshment with his severely mentally ill mother Selita is sadly typical of children who are forced by horrific circumstances to take on the parental role during their childhoods. Like many adult children who’ve gone through such an upbringing, the author is self-aware and self-critical, sometimes to excess, yet frequently self-sabotages due to a misplaced sense that he is the only one who can rescue his family, and from having involuntarily internalized the belief that he never comes first. Nonetheless, Williams grows in strength and stature as the book progresses, thanks to his intelligence, his humor, and his personal integrity.

    Blurb: Williams emerges as a genuinely decent, warmly likable man doing his utmost to struggle past more slings and arrows of outrageous fortune than any human being should have to take on in one lifetime, and always doing so with courage, humor and gallantry.

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