Don't Let Me Down
A Memoir
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- 14,99 €
Publisher Description
“Clap your hands, rattle your jewelry, and twist and shout for Erin Hosier’s Don’t Let Me Down….Fierce, catchy, hilarious—like your favorite vinyl punk 45—this bird can sing. A glorious memoir.” — Brando Skyhorse, author of Take This Man
This fierce and witty memoir about a father-daughter relationship “is a beautifully written, honest, and often funny account of what it is to grow up as a woman” (Nancy Balbirer, author of A Marriage in Dog Years).
Erin Hosier’s coming-of-age was full of contradictions. Born into the turbulent 1970s, she was raised in rural Ohio by lapsed hippies who traded 1960s rock ‘n’ roll for 1950s-era Christian hymns. Her mother’s newfound faith was rooted in a desire to manage her husband’s mood swings, which could alternately fill the house with music or with violence.
With the Beatles providing the soundtrack, Erin grew up adoring her larger than life father, Jack. Together, they bonded over their iconic songs, even as they inspired Erin to question authority—both her father’s and others’.
Don’t Let Me Down is about a brave girl trying to navigate family secrets and tragedies and escape from small-town small-mindedness. With her lyrical and tender writing, Erin “doesn’t shy away from the complications and contradictions of love, sharing both the best and the worst of her volatile, vibrant father and detailing—in her singular and often hilarious voice, the difficulty of leaving childhood, home, and the people who loved you first” (Cynthia D’Aprix Sweeney, New York Times bestselling author of The Nest).
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Literary agent Hosier shares an unsettling yet witty coming-of-age story, focusing on her relationship with her father, a man she describes as both villain and hero. Growing up in Burton, Ohio, in the 1970s, Hosier, the eldest of three, idolized the man who mocked her clumsy attempts to ride a bike, and who called her a whore when she was caught having sex as a teen. Alternatively, her father, who worked in advertising, could also be a kind, charismatic man who adored the Beatles (the family's theme song is "Here Comes the Sun"). Hosier probes deeply into her own life, realizing that her flawed relationship with her father was the harbinger of future romantic mishaps, such as dating a psychopathic sculptor and a needy young man who cheats on her. Despite the darker elements of her history she was molested at age 10 by a 15-year-old neighbor Hosier's tale is infused with levity, as when she writes of losing her virginity in a Firebird owned by a boyfriend's mom "with the I Love Jesus' bumper sticker' " ("the sex lasted only as long as a couple of commercials"). With chapter headings named after Beatles songs, this incisive memoir effectively transports readers to the '70s while exploring the weighty complexities of father-daughter love.