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Jim Burns is a unique author with a versatile body of work spanning both nonfiction and fiction across four decades. His debut book, "Women Chefs of California: Portraits and Recipes from California’s Culinary Pioneers," challenged entrenched gender stereotypes in the culinary world at a time when Webster’s dictionary narrowly defined a chef as “a skilled male cook who manages a kitchen.” Highlighting the vital contributions of female chefs, Burns’s work garnered endorsement from culinary icon Julia Child, who famously dismissed antiquated notions about women's physical capabilities in the kitchen.
Transitioning into fiction, Burns crafted "Deadline: Stiff," a gripping locked-room mystery intricately woven around the obscure history of the U.S. Human Betterment Foundation. This organization's controversial legacy serves as a chilling backdrop, highlighting its indirect role in supporting the racial purity ideologies that fueled the Nazi regime’s atrocities. Through meticulous research and compelling storytelling, Burns delivers an insightful exploration of morally complex themes rarely addressed in popular literature, inviting readers to confront uncomfortable truths within an engaging narrative framework.
His current work, "Just Remember the Happy Hours," is a compelling coming-of-age memoir that unfolds a fractured journey through the turbulent landscapes of love, loss, and family breakdown. With a deft balance of humor and tenderness, the narrative delves deeply into the complexities of surviving when the adults in one’s life fail to mature. It offers a poignant exploration of resilience and the arduous process of reclaiming one’s story amidst chaos and abandonment. This memoir not only illuminates the struggles of growing up in an unstable environment but also celebrates the strength required to forge an independent identity and find hope in the aftermath.
“An absorbing memoir that will leave readers hoping for a sequel.”
– Kirkus Reviews
Burns’ memoir packs a lifetime’s worth of trauma into 18 years.
The 1950s through the early 1970s were rife with societal change. Burns, then called Jimmy, grew up during these years, facing more chaos than most. His family was outwardly well-off, but his father, Jim, and mother, Georgia, had both grown up in poverty; they aspired to be accepted in the world of affluence and experienced economic success but social difficulty. Until Jimmy was in middle school, they lived in Northfield, Illinois, a comfortable suburb north of Chicago. Jim, the author writes, “was super-duper good at marketing, and I hoped I’d also be a genius when I grew up, but without the crazy drinking upend-the-family part.” By 1964, Jim was acting more erratic than usual, disappearing for days at a time on drunken benders. When the company he co-founded was purchased by Technicolor that year, Jim retired as a millionaire and moved the family to Paradise Valley, Arizona—a major change from Illinois, socially and educationally. After Jim died as a result of alcoholism, Georgia and Jimmy moved to Lake Forest, Illinois, an old-money Chicago suburb. Jimmy navigated adolescence essentially unparented, relying on a close group of friends for emotional support. Georgia was involved in an abusive relationship with a man named Kirk, which ended shortly before Jimmy graduated high school when Kirk shoved Georgia down a set of stairs and left her unaided until she suffered convulsions requiring brain surgery (the incident left her with aphasia). Burns effectively engages readers’ senses to evoke childhood with an alcoholic parent as he recalls listening for “the clink of ice in a glass, the gurgle of an open bottle” or “the sickly-sweet smell of vodka that poured out of Dad’s mouth.” His high school experience, spent outside of most social circles but with a close group of friends who “generally helped [him] steer the rudderless boat,” will strike familiar chords with many. His adolescent encounters with drugs, and cars will especially resonate with those who grew up in that time.
An absorbing memoir that will leave readers hoping for a sequel.
Pub Date: Sept. 2, 2025
ISBN: 9798263469894
Page count: 192pp
Review Posted Online: Oct. 28, 2025
'Just Remember the Happy Hours'
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