by Kate Nason Kate Nason ‧ RELEASE DATE: Oct. 20, 2022
An often engrossing personal drama.
A major scandal ensnares a woman’s second marriage in a media frenzy in this debut memoir.
Nason writes that one morning in 1998, a number of reporters were standing outside her home in Portland, Oregon, wanting answers regarding an affair between her husband of seven years and his former student, who’d recently become national news. This fictionalized memoir—in which the author notes that she’s changed the names of the central figures—details the journey to that moment. “I met my second husband on the same day I filed to divorce my first,” she writes; that marriage, which lasted less than a year, ended shortly after a rapist broke into the couple’s bedroom in Venice, California, and assaulted the pregnant author. Later, in 1988, 30-something Nason was a single mom in Culver City; on the day she filed for divorce, she met charming, 23-year-old Charlie. They quickly became a couple; Charlie secured a job as technical theater director for Beverly Hills High School, while Nason continued working for a major art gallery. Some of Charlie’s students, including a “bubbly,” “giggly,” and “boisterous” teenage girl named Mallory, frequently gathered at their house on the weekends. Three years and 10 proposals later, Nason finally agreed to marry Charlie. In 1994, the family, including the couple’s toddler son, moved to Portland, and so did Mallory, who attended Lewis & Clark College; later, after taking a position in Washington, D.C., the young woman became part of a headline-making scandal. Overall, this is an edgy, poignant, and compelling tale of betrayals and gaslighting, but also a fine story of healing and of rediscovering self-confidence. There’s a rhythmic cadence to the prose, which offers vividly detailed local imagery, as when the author describes a school “sheltered by towering Douglas firs, huge maples, and elm, all Crayola colors—goldenrod, burnt orange and sienna brown.” Chapter endings often contain pithy declarative commentaries that keep pages turning, and Nason communicates satisfying fortitude in times of distress, as well as personal details, such as stocking up on cheap dinnerware to throw against the family’s garage to relieve her anger.
An often engrossing personal drama.Pub Date: Oct. 20, 2022
ISBN: 9798986844022
Page Count: 238
Publisher: MaryMaryMary LLC
Review Posted Online: Dec. 22, 2022
Review Program: Kirkus Indie
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by Bill Zehme with Mike Thomas ‧ RELEASE DATE: Nov. 5, 2024
A fun if overly flamboyant appreciation of a TV giant.
A biography of American late-night television’s biggest star.
Zehme, author of biographies of Frank Sinatra and Hugh Hefner, had a lifelong love of Tonight Show host Johnny Carson. In 1973, at age 15, Zehme was “already a full-blown Carson fanboy.” As a reporter for Rolling Stone, he tried unsuccessfully to secure an interview to coincide with Carson’s 1992 retirement after a 30-year run. In 2002, Zehme, now with Esquire, “gets extended face time” with the star for a piece to mark 10 years since Carson’s departure. Shortly after Carson’s death in 2005, Zehme began work on a biography. The task was overwhelming—“there was always more to be gleaned”—even before Zehme’s 2013 diagnosis of stage 4 colorectal cancer. He died in 2023, having finished only the first three-quarters of this biography. Thomas, a longtime Chicago arts reporter, has completed the book in time for Carson’s 2025 centenary. The result is an admiring work that nonetheless acknowledges the lows as well as the highs of Carson’s life—he had three divorces—and career, from his ill-fated 1955 variety program The Johnny Carson Show, to his 1957-62 stint as host of the ABC game show Who Do You Trust?, to his taking over The Tonight Show from Jack Paar in 1962. It’s easy to tell where Zehme left off and Thomas took over. The tone changes dramatically, from Zehme’s florid style to Thomas’s drier approach. Those florid passages, which make up most of the book, are baroque in the extreme, with lines like, “And so, like sun and moon and oxygen and ionosphere, Johnny Carson was always there, reliable and steadfast.” Despite the purple prose, the result is an entertaining look at not only a unique figure in 20th-century popular culture but also a bygone era in American television.
A fun if overly flamboyant appreciation of a TV giant.Pub Date: Nov. 5, 2024
ISBN: 9781451645279
Page Count: 336
Publisher: Simon & Schuster
Review Posted Online: Sept. 14, 2024
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Oct. 15, 2024
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by Fern Brady ‧ RELEASE DATE: June 6, 2023
An unflinching self-portrait.
The tumultuous life of a bisexual, autistic comic.
In her debut memoir, Scottish comedian Brady recounts the emotional turmoil of living with undiagnosed autism. “The public perception of autistics is so heavily based on the stereotype of men who love trains or science,” she writes, “that many women miss out on diagnosis and are thought of as studious instead.” She was nothing if not studious, obsessively focused on foreign languages, but she found it difficult to converse in her own language. From novels, she tried to gain “knowledge about people, about how they spoke to each other, learning turns of phrase and metaphor” that others found so familiar. Often frustrated and overwhelmed by sensory overload, she erupted in violent meltdowns. Her parents, dealing with behavior they didn’t understand—including self-cutting—sent her to “a high-security mental hospital” as a day patient. Even there, a diagnosis eluded her; she was not accurately diagnosed until she was 34. Although intimate friendships were difficult, she depicts her uninhibited sexuality and sometimes raucous affairs with both men and women. “I grew up confident about my queerness,” she writes, partly because of “autism’s lack of regard for social norms.” While at the University of Edinburgh, she supported herself as a stripper. “I liked that in a strip club men’s contempt of you was out in the open,” she admits. “In the outside world, misogyny was always hovering in your peripheral vision.” When she worked as a reporter for the university newspaper, she was assigned to try a stint as a stand-up comic and write about it; she found it was work she loved. After “about a thousand gigs in grim little pubs across England,” she landed an agent and embarked on a successful career. Although Brady hopes her memoir will “make things feel better for the next autistic or misfit girl,” her anger is as evident as her compassion.
An unflinching self-portrait.Pub Date: June 6, 2023
ISBN: 9780593582503
Page Count: 288
Publisher: Harmony
Review Posted Online: March 10, 2023
Kirkus Reviews Issue: April 1, 2023
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