Driven
A White-Knuckled Ride to Heartbreak and Back
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- 19,99 €
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- 19,99 €
Beschreibung des Verlags
For fans of Wild, a memoir of one woman's road to hope following her troubled brother's death, told through the series of cars that transported her.
Growing up in a blue-collar, Midwestern family, Melissa Stephenson longed for escape. Her wanderlust was an innate reaction to the powerful personalities around her, and came too from her desire to find a place in the world where her artistic ambitions wouldn't be thwarted. She found in automobiles the promise of a future.
From a lineage of secondhand family cars of the late '60s, to the Honda that carried her from Montana to Texas as her new marriage disintegrated, to the '70s Ford she drove away from her brother's house after he took his life (leaving Melissa the truck, a dog, and a few mix tapes), to the VW van she now uses to take her kids camping, she knows these cars better than she knows some of the people closest to her.
Driven from grief and toward hope, Melissa reckons with what it means to lose a beloved sibling. Driven is a powerful story of healing, for all who have had to look back at pain to find the way forward.
"Written with a poet's ear and a traveler's grit, and it will be a comfort to anyone who has watched a loved one self-destruct."—Sarah Hepola, author of Blackout
"Not all writers are survivors and not all survivors are writers, but Melissa Stephenson is both and goddamn is she good. Driven is a book you will want to hold right against your heart, to take with you everywhere you go."—Domenica Ruta, author of With or Without You
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Rather than render her road story with the usual perils and pleasures of travel, Stephenson builds her memoir around the automobiles that transported her through a life of wanderlust. The book opens with Stephenson embarking on a road trip in 2000 in her brother Matthew's 1970s Ford truck after he committed suicide days earlier. From there she recalls her blue-collar childhood in the 1970s Midwest and her life as a single mother living in Montana; the different makes and models of her automobiles provide a solid touchstone for recounting time, place, and the economic and emotional circumstances of her life. Stephenson combs her memories of the various autos: the VW Squarebacks ("Volkswagens, like tattoos, build character"), a 1984 Saab ("The two years I owned her I... so busy exercising my freedom that Matthew and I rarely saw each other"), and a 1988 Honda Civic ("In one short decade, we'd bootstrapped our way over the poverty line and into a facsimile of a middle-class lifestyle"). Stephenson insightfully maps her family history with tales of strife and love; her beloved brother's mental illness and suicide; her marriage, motherhood, and divorce; and finally finding her voice as a writer. Stephenson's memoir offers a rewarding twist on an American story, and is filled with love, grief, grit, and healing.