by Edwin Fontánez ‧ RELEASE DATE: Oct. 21, 2022
Captivating from cover to cover, readers will share in the author’s struggle and celebration of family.
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Fontánez offers a tribute to his late father, Modesto Fontánez Rivera.
Set against the beauty and hardship of rural Puerto Rico, Fontánez’s memoir explores—via writings and images—his fraught relationship with a complex man. Fontánez recounts his father’s mental decline into dementia—which steals his father’s memory but yields a new connection with his son. Now a successful artist in New York, the author confronts his childhood fear that he was a disappointment to his father by digging through his childhood memories. He reinterprets the behaviors of a man whose love of parties and music seemed to eclipse his love of everything else, including his family. Realizing that Modesto, too, was an artist, Fontánez discovers someone who, struggling with a modest life and considerable responsibilities, found freedom through the one form of emotional expression available—music. Juxtaposing Modesto’s brash, irresponsible youth with the docile older man he becomes, Fontánez unpacks the cultural pressures that repress male emotions, which, in turn, drive family dynamics. An imposing presence in the life of his son, Modesto is seen alternately as a hero and a villain but always as a man of nuanced passions. Fontánez portrays this fluidity by blending elements of personal narrative, journal entries, poetry, photographs, and artwork inspired by his childhood in Puerto Rico. The resulting eclectic work is as beautiful and readable as it is memorable.
Captivating from cover to cover, readers will share in the author’s struggle and celebration of family.Pub Date: Oct. 21, 2022
ISBN: 978-0-9831891-4-5
Page Count: 268
Publisher: Exit Studio
Review Posted Online: Sept. 22, 2022
Review Program: Kirkus Indie
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by BrownMark with Cynthia M. Uhrich ‧ RELEASE DATE: Sept. 22, 2020
A memoir of vivid detail and understandable ambivalence.
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Rolling Stone & Kirkus' Best Music Books of 2020
The bassist for Prince during the Purple Rain era provides glimpses into the kingdom.
BrownMark—who was born Mark Brown in 1962—describes his rise from a single-parent home in a city of racial discrimination (Minneapolis) to success with the musical supernova. Yet there were plenty of bumps along the way. For example, in 1982, even a big raise only brought his salary to $425 per week; later, he quit after discovering that his Purple Rain Tour bonus that he’d imagined might be $1.5 million was in fact only $15,000. Those looking for a memoir awash in sex, drugs, and the seamier sides of Prince’s private life will instead discover hard work and rigid discipline under a stern taskmaster, an artist who became what he was through minute attention to detail as well as genius. The author ably chronicles his own life growing up Black in a city so White he thought of it as a “Scandinavian Mecca.” As a boy, his family didn’t have a TV, and his early experiences playing music involved a makeshift guitar constructed out of a shoe box and rubber bands. Before he auditioned for Prince, he had never been to the suburbs, and before he joined the band, he had never been on a plane. His life changed dramatically at a time when the world of music was changing, as well. Disco was breaking down walls between Black and White, and punk was bringing a new edge and urgency. As Prince’s star was ascending, he demanded the full spotlight and resented any response his young bassist was generating. The author left the band in the mid-1980s feeling that he lived “in a world of filth, greed, and deception.” Still, the connections and impressions he made as a member of The Revolution launched his career, and he notes that “working with Prince was like going to the finest music school in the land.” One of Kirkus and Rolling Stone’s Best Music Books of 2020.
A memoir of vivid detail and understandable ambivalence.Pub Date: Sept. 22, 2020
ISBN: 978-1-5179-0927-7
Page Count: 144
Publisher: Univ. of Minnesota
Review Posted Online: July 6, 2020
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Aug. 1, 2020
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PERSPECTIVES
by Oliver Sacks ‧ RELEASE DATE: Nov. 24, 2015
If that promise of clarity is what awaits us all, then death doesn’t seem so awful, and that is a great gift from Sacks. A...
Valediction from the late neurologist and writer Sacks (On the Move: A Life, 2015, etc.).
In this set of four short essays, much-forwarded opinion pieces from the New York Times, the author ponders illness, specifically the metastatic cancer that spread from eye to liver and in doing so foreclosed any possibility of treatment. His brief reflections on that unfortunate development give way to, yes, gratitude as he examines the good things that he has experienced over what, in the end, turned out to be a rather long life after all, lasting 82 years. To be sure, Sacks has regrets about leaving the world, not least of them not being around to see “a thousand…breakthroughs in the physical and biological sciences,” as well as the night sky sprinkled with stars and the yellow legal pads on which he worked sprinkled with words. Sacks works a few familiar tropes and elaborates others. Charmingly, he reflects on his habit since childhood of associating each year of his life with the element of corresponding atomic weight on the periodic table; given polonium’s “intense, murderous radioactivity,” then perhaps 84 isn’t all that it’s cut out to be. There are some glaring repetitions here, unfortunate given the intense brevity of this book, such as his twice citing Nathaniel Hawthorne’s call to revel in “intercourse with the world”—no, not that kind. Yet his thoughts overall—while not as soul-stirringly inspirational as the similar reflections of Randy Pausch or as bent on chasing down the story as Christopher Hitchens’ last book—are shaped into an austere beauty, as when Sacks writes of being able in his final moments to “see my life as from a great altitude, as a sort of landscape, and with a deepening sense of the connection of all its parts.”
If that promise of clarity is what awaits us all, then death doesn’t seem so awful, and that is a great gift from Sacks. A fitting, lovely farewell.Pub Date: Nov. 24, 2015
ISBN: 978-0-451-49293-7
Page Count: 64
Publisher: Knopf
Review Posted Online: Oct. 31, 2015
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Nov. 15, 2015
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