Mother Noise
A Memoir
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- $14.99
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- $14.99
Publisher Description
A poignant, “raw[,] and tender” (The New York Times Book Review) memoir told in essays and graphic shorts about what life looks like twenty years after recovery from addiction—and how to live with the past as a parent, writer, and sober person—from a regular opener for David Sedaris.
In the opening of this “unexpectedly uplifting...masterfully crafted memoir” (Shelf Awareness, starred review) Cindy, twenty years into recovery after a heroin addiction, grapples with how to tell her nine-year-old son about her past. She wants him to learn this history from her, not anyone else; but she worries about the effect this truth may have on him. Told in essays and graphic narrative shorts, Mother Noise is a stunning memoir that delves deep into our responsibilities as parents while celebrating the moments of grace and generosity that mark a true friendship—in this case, her benefactor and champion through the years, David Sedaris.
This is a powerful memoir about addiction, motherhood, and Cindy’s ongoing effort to reconcile the two. Are we required to share with our children the painful details of our past, or do we owe them protection from the harsh truth of who we were before?
With dark humor and brutal, clear-eyed honesty, Mother Noise is “a full-throated anthem of hope, [that] lends light to a dark issue” (Publishers Weekly, starred review).
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
A brutal story of heroin addiction gives way to a heartening look at motherhood in this brilliant debut from essayist House. Reflecting on that experience 20 years later, she explains her resolve in 2017 to tell her nine-year-old that she spent her 20s doing heroin. "If I tell him soon, it could become... a secret that might leave him feeling like he doesn't really know me," she writes before parsing her past sins via a mix of unflinchingly frank vignettes and vivid sketches. After depicting the anxiety-ridden childhood that ignited her decades-long quest to "numb" herself, she whisks readers through her seven-year affair with heroin in the 1990s in Chicago; multiple attempts at rehab; her harrowing abusive first marriage; and, eventually, the triumph of her hard-earned sobriety. She also shares the resonant story of finding her voice, with guidance from "the not-yet-famous David Sedaris," whom she met while attending the Art Institute of Chicago. Echoes of Sedaris seep through in House's mordant wit ("I crawled down... the bar on my hands and knees, like Jackie Kennedy on the back of the limo"), but it's her raw prose and poignant musings on parenting—"the first really hard thing I'd done as a sober person"—that make this sing. A full-throated anthem of hope, this lends light to a dark issue.